ABSTRACT

This new volume explores the history of an important, but neglected sector of the Western Front between 1914 and 1918 in the context of its portrayal in the media. The analysis sheds new light on of the role of the mass media in generating national mythologies.

The book focuses on the largely forgotten Armentières and La Bassée sector, a section of the Western Front which saw fighting from many different nationalities on almost every day of the war. Through analysis of this section of the Western Front, this book examines the way the First World War was interpreted, both in official and semi-official sources as well as in the mass media, comparing what was apparently happening on the Western Front battlefield to what was reported in the newspapers. It follows the different sides as they responded to the changing nature of warfare and to each other, showing how reporting was adapted to changing perceptions of national needs.

 

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I Skirmishes

chapter 1|13 pages

Lille 1914

chapter 2|14 pages

In Flanders’ muddied maze

chapter 3|5 pages

White and coloured Englishmen

chapter 4|12 pages

The German offensive: 20–31 October 1914

chapter 5|13 pages

1914: ‘Better a wet arse . . .’

chapter 6|17 pages

1914: the First Noël

part |2 pages

Part II Stellungskrieg

chapter 7|22 pages

1915: Neuve Chapelle

chapter 8|22 pages

1915: Aubers Ridge

chapter 9|17 pages

1915: Festubert and the laws of attrition

chapter 10|21 pages

1916: the Butcher’s picnics

part |2 pages

Part III Georgette

chapter 11|15 pages

St George to Georgette

chapter 12|19 pages

9 April 1918

chapter 13|13 pages

Georgette loses steam