Contested Objects breaks new ground in
the interdisciplinary study of material culture. Its
focus is on the rich and varied legacy of objects from
the First World War as the global conflict that defined
the twentieth century. From the iconic German steel
helmet to practice trenches on Salisbury Plain, and from
the ‘Dazzle Ship’ phenomenon through medal-wearing,
diary-writing, trophy collecting, the market in war
souvenirs and the evocative reworking of European
objects by African soldiers, this book presents a
dazzling array of hitherto unseen worlds of the Great
War. The innovative and multidisciplinary approach
adopted here follows the lead established by Nicholas J.
Saunders’ Matters of Conflict (Routledge 2004),
and extends its geographical coverage to embrace a truly
international perspective. Australia, Africa, Italy,
Germany, France, Belgium and Britain are all represented
by a cross-disciplinary group of scholars working in
archaeology, anthropology, cultural history, art
history, museology, and cultural heritage. The result is
a volume that resonates with richly documented and
theoretically informed case studies that illustrate how
the experiences of war can be embodied in and
represented by an endless variety of artefacts, whose
‘social lives’ have endured for almost a century and
that continue to shape our perceptions of an
increasingly dangerous world.
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