London and the First World War - Session 4: Empire View

Speaker(s): 
Elise Edmonds (State Library NSW Sydney, Australia) Anna Maguire (IWM and King's College London) and John Siblon (Birkbeck, University of London)
Date: 
20 March 2015

London and the First World War

Session 4: Empire View

Visiting Mother - London through the eyes of Australian visitors
Elise Edmonds
(State Library NSW Sydney, Australia)

Looking for home: New Zealanders in London during the First World War
Anna Maguire
(IWM and King's College London)

Negotiating hierarchy and memory: African and Caribbean colonial troops in London's Imperial spaces
John Siblon
(Birkbeck, University of London)

As part of events to commemorate the centenary of the First World War, IWM (Imperial War Museums) in partnership with the Centre for Metropolitan History is organising a major conference that will explore the ways in which London and its inhabitants were affected by, and involved with, the 1914-18 conflict. For the first time London was effectively on the front line, subject to aerial bombing and surveillance, whilst its streets, buildings and spaces were shaped by the needs of mass mobilisation, supply and defence. The war had an impact upon everyday life in the capital in other ways too, including the economy, governance, standards of living, culture, leisure, the physical environment and social life.

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