ABSTRACT

This volume aims to provide a wider view of First World War experience through focusing on landscapes less commonly considered in historiography, and on voices that have remained on the margins of popular understanding of the war. The landscape of the western front was captured during the conflict in many different ways: in photographs, paintings and print. The most commonly replicated voicing of contemporary attitudes towards the war is that of initial enthusiasm giving way to disillusionment and a sense of overwhelming futility. Investigations of the many components of war experience drawn from social and cultural history have looked to landscapes and voices beyond the frontline as a means of foregrounding different perspectives on the war. Not all of the voices presented here opposed the war, and not all of the landscapes were comprised of trenches or flanked by barbed wire. Collectively, they combine to offer further fresh insights into the multiplicity of war experience, an alternate space to the familiar tropes of mud and mayhem.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

part I|77 pages

Real and Imagined Spaces

chapter 1|22 pages

“Funny Men and Charming Girls” 1

Revue and the Theatrical Landscape of 1914–1918

chapter 2|17 pages

“When Words Are Not Enough”

The Aural Landscape of Britain’s Modern Memory of 1914–18

chapter 3|19 pages

Maisons de Tolérance

The Real and Imagined Sexual Landscapes of the Western Front

chapter 4|17 pages

“The Delightful Sense of Personal Contact That Your Letter Aroused”

Letters and Intimate Lives in the First World War

part II|78 pages

Voices

chapter 5|18 pages

“A Certain Poetess”

Recuperating Jessie Pope (1868–1941)

chapter 6|16 pages

Ventriloquizing Voices in World War I

Scribe, Poetess, Philosopher

chapter 7|20 pages

Pacifist Writer, Propagandist Publisher

Rose Macaulay and Hodder & Stoughton 1

chapter 8|22 pages

From Collusion to Condemnation

The Evolving Voice of “Woodbine Willie”

part III|67 pages

Landscapes

chapter 10|14 pages

Cars in the Desert

Claud H. Williams, S.C. Rolls and the Anglo-Sanusi War

chapter 11|16 pages

Murmurs of War

Grace Fallow Norton and “The Red Road”