“Remembering with advantages”: The memory of the Great War in Australia

Authors

  • Carolyn Holbrook Monash University Faculty of Arts

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14422/cir.i02.y2015.002

Keywords:

Australian war memory, Anzac Day, Anzac legend, martial nationalism, trauma

Abstract

Australian memory of the Great War has always been expressed most enthusiastically in the rituals of Anzac Day: an occasion that recognises the anniversary of the Australians’ first battle of the war in Turkey on 25 April 1915. In the decades after 1914–1918, the devastating effects of the war were assuaged in part by the pride that Australians felt in the fighting reputation of their soldiers. By the 1960s the rituals of Anzac were in noticeable decline. Young Australians were hostile to the values of the Great War generation and believed that the commemorative practices of Anzac Day glorified war. Despite the widespread belief that Anzac Day would die with the last of the old veterans, it has staged a remarkable resurgence. This can be explained by the remaking of the Anzac legend, from a myth anchored in British race patriotism and martial nationalism to one that speaks in the modern idiom of trauma, suffering and empathy. What remains of the original Anzac legend is the belief commonly held by contemporary Australians that their national consciousness was born at Gallipoli on 25 April 1915.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Bartlett, E. A. (1915, 8 May). Australians at Dardanelles: Thrilling deeds of heroism. Argus, p.19.

Bean, C. E. W. (Ed.). (1921–1942). Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918 (12 volumes). Sydney: Angus and Robertson.

Bean, C. E. W. (1910/1963). On the wool track (New edition). Sydney: Sirius Books.

Bean, C. E. W. (1911/1956). The dreadnought of the darling (New edition). Sydney: Angus and Robertson.

Bean, C. E. W. (1913). Flagships three. London: Alston Rivers.

Bean, C. E. W. (1968). Anzac to Amiens: A shorter history of the Australian fighting services in the first world war (5th Ed). Canberra: Australian War Memorial (AWM).

Bodey, M. (2006). Gallipoli. In S. Hocking and B. Collins (Eds.), 100 greatest films of Australian cinema. Melbourne: Scribal.

Bracco, R. M. (1993). Merchants of hope: British middlebrow writers and the first world war, 1919–1939. Providence, R. I: Berg.

Clark, J. (2009, 26 April) Collingwood coach Mick Malthouse tells his players they “let down the Anzacs”. Sunday Herald Sun. Retrieved from www.theaustralian.com.au/news/welet-down-the-anzacs-malthouse/story-e6frg6n6-1225704076351

Damousi, J. (2008). War and Commemoration. In D. M. Schreuder and S. Ward (Eds.), Australia’s Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Donaldson C. & Lake, M. (2010). Whatever happened to the anti-war movement? In M. Lake, H. Reynolds, J. Damousi, M. McKenna & C. Donaldson (Eds.), What’s wrong with Anzac? The militarisation of Australian history. Sydney: New South.

Fewster, K. (1982). Ellis Ashmead Bartlett and the making of the Anzac legend. Journal of Australian Studies, vol. 10, pp. 17–30.

Gammage, B. (1974/2010). The broken years: Australian soldiers in the Great War (New Edition). Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.

Gammage, B. (2002, April 19). Speech at Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA), Canberra.

Gammage, B. (2010, May 27). Speech at Estaminet Club, Canberra.

Hancock, W. K. (1930). Australia. London: Ernest Benn.

Haupt, R. (1986, April 13). A parade of decline in memory of fall. Canberra Times, p. 48.

Holbrook, C. (2014). The role of nationalism in Australian war literature of the 1930s. First World War Studies, vol. 5 (no. 2), pp. 213–31.

Inglis, K. S. (1965). The Anzac tradition. Meanjin Quarterly, vol. 24 (no. 1), pp. 25–44.

Jinman, R. (2003, April 2). Stirring struggle endures to this day. Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved from http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/04/01/1048962752382.html

Lake, M. (1975). A divided society: Tasmania during world war I. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. Letter to the editor. (1969, May 21). Australian Women’s Weekly, p.125.

Lloyd, D. W. (1998). Battlefield tourism: Pilgrimage and the commemoration of the Great War in Britain, Australia and Canada, 1919-1939. Oxford: Berg.

Macintyre, S. (1994). A history for a nation: Ernest Scott and the making of Australian history. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.

Macleod, J. (2004). Reconsidering Gallipoli. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Mann, L. (1932). Flesh in armour. Melbourne: Phaedrus.

Maxwell, J. (1932). Hell’s bells and mademoiselles. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.

McKenna, M. (2010). How did it become Australia’s national day? In M. Lake, H. Reynolds, J.Damousi, M. McKenna & C. Donaldson (Eds.), What’s wrong with Anzac? The militarisation of Australian history. Sydney: New South.

Morbid joy claim on Anzac day. (1958, April 30). Canberra Times, p. 15.

Oates, L. (2006). With the big guns: An Australian artilleryman in the Great War. Melbourne: Shannon Books.

Our national character: The influence of climate. (1898, August 27). Argus, p. 11.

Paul, W. M. (2005). Blessed with a cheerful nature: A reading of the letters of Lieutenant George Stanley McDowell MC, 13th battalion AIF, 1914–1917. Adelaide: self-published.

Reynaud, D. (2007). Celluloid Anzacs: The Great War through Australian cinema. Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing.

Rogers J. G. (Ed.). (1985). For king and country: The war diaries of J. M. Laidlaw. Moe, Vic: self-published.

Scates, B. (2006). Return to Gallipoli: Walking the battlefields of the Great War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Scates, B. (2009). A place to remember: A history of the Shrine of Remembrance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Scott, E. (1916). A short history of Australia. London: H. Milford, Oxford University Press.

Serle, G. (1965). The digger tradition and Australian nationalism. Meanjin Quarterly. Vol. 24 (no. 2), pp. 148–58.

Serle, G. (1982/2002). John Monash: A biography (New edition). Melbourne: Melbourne University Press.

Serle, G. (1973). From deserts the prophets come: The creative spirit in Australia, 1788–1972. Melbourne: William Heinemann.

Seymour, A. (1993/1993). The one day of the year (New edition). Sydney: Angus and Robertson.

Seymour, A. (1994). The one day of the year in Three Australian plays. Melbourne: Penguin.

Sinclair, M. (1996). Dear Ad... love Ron: The complete collection of the handwritten letters and diary entries of Ronald Augustine Sinclair, Australian Imperial Forces, Fifth Division Artillery, 14th field army brigade, 114th howitzer battery on active service in Egypt, France and Belgium 1915–1919. Singleton, NSW: Sisters of Mercy.

Spittel, C. (2007). Remembering the war: Australian novelists of the inter-war years. Australian Literary Studies. Vol. 23 (no. 2), pp. 121–39.

Spittel, C. (2011). A portable monument? Leonard Mann’s Flesh in Armour and Australia’s memory of the First World War. Book History. Vol. 14, pp. 187–220.

The relevance of Anzac. (n.d.). Australian Parliament House Research Publications. Retrieved from http://www.aph.gov.au/About_Parliament/Parliamentary_Departments/Parliamentary_Library/pubs/anzac_day/relevance

Thomas, B. (1981, September 18). Star watch: Mel Gibson, Mark Lee and Gallipoli. Associated Press.

Thomson, A. (1989). “Steadfast until death”? C. E. W. Bean and the representation of Australian military manhood. Australian Historical Studies. Vol. 23 (no. 93), pp. 462–478.

Thomson, A. (1994/2013). Anzac memories: Living with the legend (New edition). Melbourne: Monash University Press.

Turner, I. (1965/1979). Industrial labour and politics: The dynamics of the labour movement in Eastern Australia, 1900–1921 (New edition). Sydney: Hale and Iremonger.

Turner, I. (1968). The Australian Dream: A collection of anticipations about Australia from Captain Cook to the Present Day. Melbourne: Sun Books.

Turner, I. (1974). 1914–1919. In F. K. Crowley (Ed.), A new history of Australia, (pp. 312-57). Melbourne: William Heinemann.

Twomey, C. (2013). Trauma and the reinvigoration of Anzac: An argument. History Australia. Vol. 10 (no. 3), pp. 85-108.

Ward, R. (1958/1966). The Australian legend (New edition). Melbourne: Oxford University Press.

Ward, R. (1977/1983). A nation for a continent: The history of Australia, 1901–1975 (New edition).

Melbourne: Heinemann Education Australia.

Ward, R. (1988). A radical life: The autobiography of Russel Ward. Melbourne: Macmillan.

Ward, S. & McKenna, M. (2007). “It was really moving, mate”: The Gallipoli pilgrimage and sentimental nationalism in Australia. Australian Historical Studies. Vol. 38 (no.129),

pp. 141-51.

Ward, S. (2004a). A war memorial in celluloid. In J. Macleod (Ed.), Reconsidering Gallipoli. Manchester: Manchester University Press.

Ward, S. (2004b). A war memorial in celluloid: The Gallipoli legend in Australian cinema, 1940s–1980s. In J. Macleod (Ed.), Gallipoli: Making history. London: Frank Cass.

Waugh, S. (2012, April 24). ABC News. Retrieved from www.abc.net.au/news/2012-04-20/anzac-day-cricket-special/3962992

Williams, H. R. (1933). The gallant company: An Australian soldier’s story of 1915–18. Sydney: Angus and Robertson.

Williams, H. R. (1935). Comrades of the great adventure. Sydney: Angus and Robertson. Women working together towards suffrage and onwards. (n.d.). Women Working Together. Retrieved from http://www.womenworkingtogether.com.au/14.%20Working%20Collectively.html

Young, A. (1995). The harmony of illusions: Inventing post-traumatic stress disorder. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Downloads

How to Cite

Holbrook, C. (2015). “Remembering with advantages”: The memory of the Great War in Australia. Comillas Journal of International Relations, (2), 17–30. https://doi.org/10.14422/cir.i02.y2015.002