Cultural Memory in Canada: Revisiting the Battlefields in Reality and Fiction

2015 | book part. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Cultural Memory in Canada: ​Revisiting the Battlefields in Reality and Fiction​
Glaser, B. ​ (2015)
In:​Löschnigg, Martin; Kraus, Karin​ (Eds.), North America, Europe and the Cultural Memory of the First World War pp. 79​-91. ​Heidelberg: ​Winter.

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Authors
Glaser, Brigitte 
Editors
Löschnigg, Martin; Kraus, Karin
Abstract
The First World War represented a watershed in US-American and Canadian relations with Europe. It re-defined images of the Old World and the New on both sides of the Atlantic, leading to the demise of Europe as a cultural model for many U.S. and Canadian writers and artists. In Canada in particular, the war has come to be regarded as a milestone on the road to nationhood, as a strong sense of ‘Canadianness’ emerged from the country’s military engagement on the European battlefields. In Europe, in turn, the influx of North American soldiers heralded future cultural influences from across the Atlantic. The present volume investigates the cultural memory of the ‘Great War’ of 1914–1918 from a transatlantic perspective. Its chapters analyze the way in which literature, art and film have rendered the various encounters and confrontations between the Old and New Worlds which took place in the course of the war, and the significance of the war as a crucial episode in transatlantic (cultural) history.
Issue Date
2015
Publisher
Winter
Organization
Abteilung Anglistische Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaft 
ISBN
978-3-8253-6402-1
eISBN
978-3-8253-7557-7
Language
English

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