Academic literature on the topic 'Australian Soldiers writings'

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Journal articles on the topic "Australian Soldiers writings"

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West, Brad. "Dialogical Memorialization, International Travel and the Public Sphere: A Cultural Sociology of Commemoration and Tourism at the First World War Gallipoli Battlefields." Tourist Studies 10, no. 3 (2010): 209–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1468797611407756.

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As part of a larger ethnographic research project, this article analyses the history of memorialization on the First World War Gallipoli battlefields and its relationship with international travel and tourism. It contrasts the original Australian and New Zealand memorialization on the site with Turkish memorials constructed there in the late 20th century, a significant proportion of which are characterized by direct symbolic recognition of the ‘other’. Drawing on Bakhtin’s writings on referential discourses I refer to these as being dialogical. At Gallipoli this dialogical memorialization faci
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Guly, HR. "Archibald Lang McLean (1885–1922) – Explorer, writer and soldier." Journal of Medical Biography 26, no. 1 (2015): 43–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967772015622877.

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Archibald McLean qualified in Sydney in 1910 and in the following year joined Douglas Mawson’s Australasian Antarctic Expedition (1911–1914). He took a full part in the expedition and was forced to stay an extra year when Mawson failed to return to the base before the ship left. During this time he edited the expedition newspaper, The Adelie Blizzard. His writing impressed Mawson who invited him to work on the book about the expedition. This necessitated visiting England to liaise with publishers and promote the book. He was in England when the First World War broke out and he was commissioned
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KLEINREESINK, ESMERALDA. "MILITARY AUTOBIOGRAPHIES: ENCOURAGE, DISCOURAGE OR IGNORE?" CONTEMPORARY MILITARY CHALLENGES, Volume 2019, issue 21/2 (June 12, 2019): 105–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.33179/10.33179/bsv.99.svi.11.cmc.21.2.5.

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Of every 6,000 soldiers deployed, one publishes an autobiographical book about their experiences shortly after the war. Military memoirs are therefore an inescapable consequence of deployments. How should defence organizations react to these soldier-authors: should they be encouraged, discouraged, or ignored? A substantiated answer to that question is given in this article by providing a profile of all writers of military Afghanistan memoirs from seven countries (the US, the UK, Germany, Canada, Australia, Belgium and the Netherlands) and the kind of plots they write. A small majority write po
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Donaldson, Carina. "“The book is inspired by the Australian soldier”: the wounds of war and the literary rehabilitation of the Australian soldier in Vietnam War writing." Journal of Australian Studies 36, no. 4 (2012): 473–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2012.727450.

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Elliott, Dorice Williams. "TRANSPORTED TO BOTANY BAY: IMAGINING AUSTRALIA IN NINETEENTH-CENTURY CONVICT BROADSIDES." Victorian Literature and Culture 43, no. 2 (2015): 235–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1060150314000539.

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The speaker of this ballad(circa 1828) laments the fact that, though he was born of “honest parents,” he became “a roving blade” and has been convicted of an unspecified crime for which he has been sentenced to “Botany Bay,” a popular name for Australia. Although he addresses his audience as “young men of learning,” the rest of the ballad implies that he, as is conventional in the broadside form, is a working-class apprentice gone astray. Like this fictional speaker, approximately 160,000 men and women convicted of crimes ranging from poaching hares to murder – but mostly theft – were transpor
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Gitau, Lydia Wanja, Achol Arop, and Caroline Lenette. "‘My Dad Was, Is a Soldier’: Using Collaborative Poetic Inquiry to Explore Intergenerational Trauma, Resilience, and Wellbeing in the Context of Forced Migration." Social Sciences 12, no. 8 (2023): 455. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/socsci12080455.

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The topics of intergenerational trauma, resilience, and wellbeing as they relate to forced migration are receiving more attention in the arts and health literature. Yet, we know very little about how refugee-background young adults manage their psychosocial wellbeing when they grow up surrounded by stories of conflict, loss, and trauma. Achol has been writing poetry to represent and amplify the narratives of those around her (parents, family, and the South Sudanese community in Sydney, Australia). These stories are central elements of her lived experience and the diverse experiences of her com
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Blommaert, Jan, and Piia Varis. "The importance of unimportant language." Multilingual Margins: A journal of multilingualism from the periphery 2, no. 1 (2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.14426/mm.v2i1.47.

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In a recent paper, the Australian historian, Martyn Lyons (2013), reviews his attempts to study ‘history from below’, using what can be called grassroots writing by French and Italian soldiers of the Great War. Lyons remarks that the ‘First World War produced a flood of letter-writing by peasants whose literary capacity has often been underestimated’ (Lyons 2013: 5). In France, no less than 10,000 million postal items were dispatched during the war, huge numbers of those being letters and cards written by soldiers from the frontlines to their loved ones.
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Chisari, Maria. "Testing Citizenship, Regulating History: The Fatal Impact." M/C Journal 14, no. 6 (2011). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.409.

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Introduction In October 2007, the federal Coalition government legislated that all eligible migrants and refugees who want to become Australian citizens must sit and pass the newly designed Australian citizenship test. Prime Minister John Howard stated that by studying the essential knowledge on Australian culture, history and values that his government had defined in official citizenship test resources, migrants seeking the conferral of Australian citizenship would become "integrated" into the broader, "mainstream" community and attain a sense of belonging as new Australian citizens (qtd. in
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Murphy, Ffion. "Speaking for the dead: Writing and the Unknown Australian Soldier." TEXT, April 29, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.52086/001c.25122.

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Brennan, Claire. "Australia's Northern Safari." M/C Journal 20, no. 6 (2017). http://dx.doi.org/10.5204/mcj.1285.

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IntroductionFilmed during a 1955 family trip from Perth to the Gulf of Carpentaria, Keith Adams’s Northern Safari showed to packed houses across Australia, and in some overseas locations, across three decades. Essentially a home movie, initially accompanied by live commentary and subsequently by a homemade sound track, it tapped into audiences’ sense of Australia’s north as a place of adventure. In the film Adams interacts with the animals of northern Australia (often by killing them), and while by 1971 the violence apparent in the film was attracting criticism in letters to newspapers, the fi
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Books on the topic "Australian Soldiers writings"

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T, Laird J., ed. The Australian experience of war. Mead & Beckett, 1988.

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Maclaren, Gordon, ed. Poets in uniform: An anthology of verse from SALT, the Australian Army Education Service journal, World War II. Footprint, 1989.

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David, Griffin, ed. Changi days: The prisoner as poet. Kangaroo Press, 2002.

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Paul ; Collison, Kerry B. Barrett. The Happy Warrior: An Anthology of Australian and New Zealand Military Poetry. Sid Harta Publishers, 2001.

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Black, Jeremy, and Effie Karageorgos. Australian Soldiers in South Africa and Vietnam: Words from the Battlefield. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2017.

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Australian Soldiers in South Africa and Vietnam: Words from the Battlefield. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2016.

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Australian Soldiers in South Africa and Vietnam: Words from the Battlefield. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2016.

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Australian soldiers in South Africa and Vietnam: Words from the battlefield. Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2016.

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Aussie: ... the Diggers own paper of the battle field, 1914-1918. Veritas Publishing Co., 1985.

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Johnston, Mark. Derrick VC in His Own Words: The Wartime Writings of Australia's Most Famous Fighting Soldier of World War II. NewSouth Publishing, 2021.

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Book chapters on the topic "Australian Soldiers writings"

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Damousi, Joy. "In Search of Victor: Transnationalism, Emotion, and War." In Total War. British Academy, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197266663.003.0009.

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In October 1949, in the closing month of the Greek Civil War, a young soldier named Pandelis Klinkatsis was killed stepping on a landmine in Northern Greece. Pandelis was my uncle. The announcement of his death devastated his immediate family including my mother Sophia. I focus this chapter on the individual story of the loss of my uncle and my mother’s grief to cast a wider canvas on the emotions of war and their enduring legacies. This story explores the repercussions of war such as migration, the impact on sibling and romantic love, absence and separation during and after war. It examines t
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