Wednesday, 17 June 2015

What Do We Remember?: Commemorating the First World War Centenary and British Identity


"ANZAC Day War Memorial"
London, United Kingdom
Photograph Courtesy of: BBC

War, and particularly the First World War, has made a cultural, economic, and physical impact on the landscape of Britain. After the final soldier passed, Britons choose to continue to honor the legacy of those who fought through memorializing. This choice to remember, to observe the centenary, 2 minutes silence, to wear poppies, and to attend services, speaks to the British national identity.

When we imagine the First World War, we do so in a context of mythology and metaphor. No longer do we conjure specific dates and battles as easily as we do mud, gore, and death, or I should say most importantly death. The Great War has become so because of the cultural impact it created on its time, and the legacy of that impact on the generations that followed. Upon the centenary we are compelled by some ardent desire to come to grips with what this legacy has become and what it means in Britain today.


"The Futility of War"
Imperial War Museum Archives, London
Photograph Courtesy of: IWM

Although there are a number of mythologies and metaphors that can be used to look at how and why we choose to remember the War, however grim it may be will be through the mythologizing of death. Death is the primary way in which the war is mythologized and remembered. Through the topic of death we are able to ask questions about purpose, tragedy, legacy. When we imagine the First World War, we evoke images of trench warfare, mud, but also the horrendous scale of casualties that resulted. The numbers are physically hard to take in and so through poetry, novels, memoirs, documentaries and film we are able to in some ways comprehend the scale of violence.


"Mud"
Imperial War Museum Archives, London
Photograph Courtesy of: IWM

It is less easy to remember the monotony of trench life, shuffling supply lines, digging, waiting and sleeping that took place. We focus on the Western Front Battles despite the ones fought throughout Africa, Asia and the Middle East. Even the Western Front was not constant fighting. Long periods of stalemate meant soldiers more commonly waited for orders than living in constant bombardment and attack. 

That is not to say there wasn’t tragedy. Although the numbers change with every new study, it is safe to say that Britain and nearly every other primary combatant suffered numbers on a scale that had never occurred before or since the war. Mythologizing the war in terms of death allows the nation to accept the tragedy and move forward. Applying myth theory of Roland Barthes, the myths we have of the dead and dying take on a significance that is not necessarily tied to exactness of numbers of dead and the means of death, but rather allows for a focusing to transform history into nature, and the ambiguity of what took place falls into a narrative. This is all part of a process of remembering, but also forgetting. What we are left with is the simple myth “the War was won, and many died during it.”

In commemorating the war we allow ourselves to place the destruction and unpleasantness behind us and move forward. The war although a major moment in British culture and history, is allowed to move further and further into the past. This is evident by which the war since its ending has been remembered.

In the years after the first Armistice Day up until the 1960s the focus of commemoration was fixated on an audience of bereaved family members. It was possible to see parents in mourning clothes for public services until Second World War. The incorporation of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier offered a focal point for families who were unable to have the consolation of burying their relatives for reasons related to absence of body parts and that the War Commission was incapable of fulfilling the requests of many families to bring bodies home, the majority of whom remained abroad in proximity to where they fell.

Because of this public services and war memorials became a tangible means of mourning for relatives. War memorials sprang up in every town and village to mark the mourning of neighbors and friends. National services and public memorials have become to be part of the heritage landscape. The cenotaph was particularly popular and remained a focal point of fpublic services. Originally a temporary structure, it was so beloved that when it fell into disrepair the general public demanded the creation of this permanent one.

"War Cloister at Winchester College"
Winchester, United Kingdom
Photograph by: Amanda Chain

Public Schools like Winchester College shown here created incredible monuments. After the Second World War rather than build new monuments, many like this one were incorporated into the First and codified commemoration of the World Wars took place, but it is important to note that in remembering the WWII by no means meant the end of the commemoration of the WWI.

The language of memorializing identifies the successful completion of the mourning process. Mike Rowlands’ essay in The Art of Forgetting summarizes how War Memorials are able to mediate between memories of brutal, tragic events involving death on a massive scale with ideals that these were not in vain. They become symbols of national identity because they appropriate values of sacrifice made in benefit of the nation.
      
The notion of language is incredibly important. Since the 1960s, and the rapid decline of living memory, the rhetoric of remembrance changed. The focus of “remembering” rather than just commemorating began to take stage. The audience of public services for the formerly Armistice Day turned into Remembrance Sunday, had the feel of duty to memorial in general rather than remembering specific people.

Since 1968, the service structure for the Church of England a program for Remembrance Sunday is uniform and to be carried out throughout all the Anglican Churches of the United Kingdom. It requires 2 minutes of silence and Acts of Remembrance and Prayer of Commemoration. The program for the part of Remembrance Day services that reflect a clear emphasis on Memory and loss of life of the soldiers. The choice in calling it “The Remembering” is not coincidence. Interestingly, since the Two minutes of silence was introduced, it elicited nearly full participation since it became part of the public program in the 1920s.

It is followed by the prayer of commemoration, which invokes Thanksgiving for the sacrifice of those who lost their lives in military services. So again we see the choice repetition of sacrifice and mourning of loss of life.

The 17th of July 2014 marked the official beginning of the centenary as it was the 100th anniversary of the initial involvement of British Troops, specifically the British Expeditionary Forces in the First World War. This centenary marks more than just a war, but illustrates a national collective of Britain. In the 100 years since, Britain has solidified how it chooses to remember the war. Commemorating the huge number of losses with a continued rhetoric of “Lest We Forget” and sacrificial honoring, the War is remembered and life continues.

The Tower of London embarked on a public remembrance project to commemorate the event entitled “The Tower of London Remembers Project.” Although the most visual stunning feature has been the 888,246 ceramic poppies on display by artist Paul Cummins and stage designer Thomas Piper in the exhibition entitled “Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red.” This display highlighted the staggering number of fatalities from the War.

"Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red" by Paul Cummins and Thomas Piper
Tower of London, London
Photograph by: Amanda Chain

Of the Historic Royal Palaces, the Tower of London receives nearly ¾ of the visitors to its sites. Taking figures from the annual review, which ended in March of this year, the site saw a surge in visitor numbers thanks in part to the display. The numbers to the Tower have been relatively the same since 2009 floating around 2.45 million the site had an increase of nearly 400,000. In monetary terms the 3% increase in visitor numbers translated to 8 million pounds.

Estimates have that the site drew in an additional 4-5 million visitors who came to view the display, but not enter the site as a paying customer. This not only emphasizes the popularity of commemorating the First World War, but the economic benefits in doing so. A number of museums have hosted exhibitions, but this one in particular elicited great praise. Mayor of London Boris Johnson called it, “a unique and poignant focus of remembrance in this centenary year. It has grown rapidly in popularity, to such an extent that it is now a global visitor attraction.”

By marking the centenary of the First World War, we admit to ourselves this is not just an event that took place. We accept that there is a greater significance that requires a public memorializing. The Great War is a part of the public memory and national conscience. When we repeat the myths and images we see a deeper meaning and narrative that is communicated to those who were not alive to remember. And as society has changed, so has the commemoration, but the constancy of it is written in the fabric of public participation and acknowledgement.


The War has turned from an historical event, to a marker of British modernity, and is learned, taught, and remembered through myth and narratives chosen to remember in particular those whose death was intertwined with it.



"Dead Soldier of the First World War"
BBC Archives
Photograph: Courtesy of the BBC


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