Forgotten Voices of the Great War
Forgotten Voices of the Great War is a collection of interviews with people who lived through the First World War.The book is part of the Imperial War Museum's oral archive.
Author | Max Arthur |
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Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Forgotten Voices |
Subject | History |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Ebury Press |
Publication date | 2002 |
Media type | Print (hardcover and paperback), audiobook |
Pages | 352 |
ISBN | 0-09-188209-5 |
OCLC | 789734463 |
Followed by | Forgotten Voices of the Blitz and the Battle of Britain |
In 1960, the Imperial War Museum began a momentous and important task. A team of academics, archivists and volunteers set about tracing WWI veterans and interviewing them at length in order to record the experiences of ordinary individuals in war. The IWM aural archive has become the most important archive of its kind in the world. Authors have occasionally been granted access to the vaults, but digesting the thousands of hours of footage is a monumental task. Author Max Arthur puts the interviews into chronological and campaign order, and provides some context about the events that surround the memories. The book includes testimonies from Harry Patch, Philip Neame, Horace Birks, Edmund Blunden, Douglas Wimberley, Mabel Lethbridge, Reginald Leonard Haine, Edward Spears, Godfrey Buxton, Henry Williamson, Tom Adlam, Cecil Arthur Lewis, Montagu Cleeve, Charles Carrington, Keith Officer and Norman Demuth.
Now, forty years on, the Imperial War Museum has at last given author Max Arthur and his team of researchers unlimited access to the complete WWI tapes. These are the forgotten voices of an entire generation of survivors of the Great War. The resulting book is an important and compelling history of WWI in the words of those who experienced it.
This book has also been dramatized for the stage by the playwright Malcolm McKay.