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From Mametz Wood to The General

Series
First World War Poetry Digital Archive
Audio Embed
Lecture on Siegfried Sassoon given at the Imperial War Museum, London, 12th November 2011.
How did Siegfried Sassoon, whose first patriotic outpourings are almost more Brooke-like than those of Rupert Brooke himself, come to write the bitter war-satires for which he has become famous? Many factors went into the making of 'Mad Jack' - the death of his younger brother at Gallipoli in November 1915, the loss of his great love, David Thomas, and his 'dear' bombing sergeant, Mick O'Brian, in early 1916, and the first day of the Somme, which he witnessed on 1 July that same year. But it was the gruesome aftermath of the battle of Mametz Wood which finally brought home to him the grim realities of war. Presented by the Siegfried Sassoon Fellowship with support from The Wilfred Owen Association.

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First World War Poetry Digital Archive

Richard Holmes interview

In this interview, the well-known military historian Brigadier Richard Holmes discusses his work on WW1, remembrance, his views on WW1 poetry, and how those experiences relate to the British Army currently serving in Iraq.
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First World War Poetry Digital Archive

The Last Phase

A discussion on the last phase of the First World War. A talk given at 'Wilfred Owen: From Doomed Youth to Battle of the Sambre', Imperial War Museum, 10th November 2012.
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Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK: England & Wales; http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
First World War Poetry Digital Archive
People
Jean Moorcroft Wilson
Keywords
#greatwriters
the general
poetry
imperial war museum
mametz wood
great war
ww1
first world war
world war one
Department: IT Services
Date Added: 27/02/2013
Duration: 01:00:00

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