Filtrer par genre
- 75 - USA: IsolationismSat, 27 Jun 2015
- 74 - Germany: The Waging of WarFri, 26 Jun 2015
- 73 - Sarajevo: NationalismFri, 26 Jun 2015
- 72 - Jordan: Redrawing the Middle EastMon, 22 Jun 2015
- 71 - Britain: The Psychology of WarThu, 30 Apr 2015
- 70 - Australia: The Legend of AnzacSat, 18 Apr 2015
- 69 - Tanzania: Race and Colonial WarSat, 11 Apr 2015
- 68 - France: HeroismSat, 06 Dec 2014
- 67 - WW1 At Home 20 - The Baghdadi Jews & a Terrier on Zeppelin watchThu, 13 Nov 2014
- 66 - India: ImperialismSat, 08 Nov 2014
- 65 - WW1 At Home 19 - Tank Trials & Making Jam for the FrontlineThu, 23 Oct 2014
- 64 - Soldiers of the Empire 2/2 – The Fight in FairylandWed, 22 Oct 2014
- 63 - Soldiers of the Empire – Recruitment & ResistanceMon, 20 Oct 2014
- 62 - St Petersburg: RevolutionSat, 18 Oct 2014
- 61 - WW1 At Home 18 - R&R for American Volunteers & a Bristol Love SongThu, 16 Oct 2014
- 60 - Keep the Home Fires Burning
Don Black tells the fascinating story of Ivor Novello and the song that made his name. Keep The Home Fires Burning marks the centenary of a song that became popular both in the WW1 trenches and on the home front, and continued to be sung by soldiers in conflicts well into the 1950s. The programme features the best Ivor Novello tunes, some extraordinary Imperial War Museum archive and explores how music was used as a morale booster in the First World War.
Sat, 11 Oct 2014 - 59 - WW1 At Home 17 - The Sikh Contribution & the Merseyside FerriesFri, 10 Oct 2014
- 58 - Episode 3 - Forgotten Heroes, The Indian Army in the Great War
In the third part of his documentary looking at the Asian contribution to WW1, Sarfraz Manzoor examines the effect of WW1 on India, nationally and locally. Through letters from servicemen and families, the loss to loved ones becomes clear - not just on an emotional level, but also leading to hardship for farming communities often losing their strongest workers. The beginnings of nationalism can be seen just before the war with the violent activities of the Ghadar party, but a more mainstream nationalist voice gathers increasing strength as the war comes to a close. Besides the contribution of men, in 1918 and 1919, India comes very close to famine as a result of the huge amount of foodstuffs it supplied for the war effort.
Thu, 09 Oct 2014 - 57 - WW1 At Home 16 - The Chilwell Explosion & a Wartime EntertainerThu, 02 Oct 2014
- 56 - WW1 At Home 15 - Pilot Hero Mick Mannock & Flora Sandes' EnlistmentWed, 24 Sep 2014
- 55 - WW1 At Home 14 - A Captain's Execution & U-boat DefencesWed, 17 Sep 2014
- 54 - The War That Changed The World: Istanbul - Modernity and SecularismMon, 08 Sep 2014
- 53 - Episode 2 - Forgotten Heroes, The Indian Army in the Great War
In the second part of his documentary looking at the Asian contribution to WW1, Sarfraz Manzoor charts the experiences of soldiers and labourers in Mesopotamia and Gallipoli. The story for India changes as the war wears on. Recruitment becomes more draconian, British officers are killed, leaving a void which is not easy to fill, and the pressure on India for food supplies and the resources of war increases. As Turkey enters the war, German and Turkish propaganda plays on the Muslim soldiers' faith and the British Authorities take very seriously the threat of mutiny.
Thu, 21 Aug 2014 - 52 - Episode 1 - Forgotten Heroes, The Indian Army in the Great War
Sarfraz Manzoor tells the story of the 1.27m men from the Indian Army who fought valiantly in the Great War, through a series of the soldiers' letters written home from Western Front. This first episode of a three part series focuses on the make-up of the army in 1914, including the colonial policy to recruit from what were considered the martial races - communities with a warrior tradition.
Wed, 20 Aug 2014 - 51 - Heroes at War: Frederick KellyWed, 13 Aug 2014
- 50 - Heroes at War: Walter Tull
Ex-Northampton Town player Clarke Carlisle tells the story of Walter Tull, the first Afro-Caribbean outfield player in the top division of English football, and the first to be commissioned as an infantry officer in the British Army. Clarke retraces the steps that took Tull from the playing field of Northampton Town to the place where he lost life fighting for his country.
Tue, 12 Aug 2014 - 49 - Veterans: From WW1 to Afghanistan
Radio 1's Greg James hears from British troops who served in Afghanistan as they contrast their experiences with those who fought in World War One. Mixing new interviews from Afghanistan veterans with archive of those who endured the trenches, this story brings out the universality of experience of going to war: the joining up, the camaraderie, the killing, the trauma and the loss, as well as asking if all wars change those who fight in them in similar ways.
Tue, 05 Aug 2014 - 48 - Women's lives on the Home Front
Woman's Hour goes behind the scenes at new Radio 4 drama Home Front, as it begins its four-year run. Actor Harriet Walter talks about her cameo role as Emmeline Pankhurst, and we hear from the writers about the opportunity to dramatise the domestic lives of people whose stories aren’t told in military history books. Plus Emma Barnett is joined by Home Front editor Jessica Dromgoole and academic Dr Angela K Smith to discuss the war's impact on the lives of women far away from the trenches.
Mon, 04 Aug 2014 - 47 - WW1 At Home 13 - Sikh Soldiers & Pilot HeroesSun, 03 Aug 2014
- 46 - How Britain Went to War
Leading Whitehall historian Peter Hennessy examines Britain's secret war planning and preparations before 1914. Drawing on official papers, sound archive, and interviews with historians, Hennessy discusses what was in the minds of Asquith, ministers, officials and top soldiers and sailors, as they prepared for a possible conflict and as they finally took Britain into war in August 1914. He explores tensions between senior military and naval officers, between the Admiralty and the War Office, and within the Cabinet, and shows how debates and divisions shaped the war plans and influenced their effectiveness.
Mon, 28 Jul 2014 - 45 - The War that Changed the World: Part TwoSat, 19 Jul 2014
- 44 - Minds at War - The Grieving Parents
Poet Ruth Padel reflects on German artist Kathe Kollwitz's memorial for her son, who died on the battlefields of the First World War in October 1914. The German painter, printmaker and sculptor created some of the greatest and most searing accounts of the tragedies of poverty, hunger and war in the 20th century. The death of her youngest son Peter prompted a prolonged period of deep depression, but by the end of that year she was turning her thoughts to creating a monument to him and his fallen comrades. The final memorial, entitled The Grieving Parents, was finally completed in 1932 and placed in the cemetery where Peter lay.
Sat, 19 Jul 2014 - 43 - Minds at War - The Broken Wing
Santanu Das discusses Indian poet Sarojini Naidu's 1917 collection The Broken Wing. Born in Hyderabad in 1879, Naidu became known as "the Nightingale of India" for her work as a poet and also as an Indian independence activist. Das reflects on the importance of Naidu's work and on the impact of the First World War on the Indian fight for independence.
Fri, 18 Jul 2014 - 42 - Minds at War - Fighting France
BBC Correspondent Lyse Doucet introduces novelist Edith Wharton's reportage from wartime France. Wharton, best known for The Age Of Innocence and The House of Mirth, was granted unique access to the Western front and wrote one of the most evocative and undeservedly neglected accounts of life in France in World War One. In its pages, penned early in the war, are Wharton's painterly descriptions of the country's overnight transformation from peace to war, her deep love for France and its people, and her accounts of the destruction wrought upon the villages and towns in the path of the German invader.
Thu, 17 Jul 2014 - 41 - Minds at War - Battleship Potemkin
For Russians of director Sergei Eisenstein's generation, the experience of the First World War was overtaken by the revolution of 1917, which took Russia out of the war and plunged it into a bitter civil war from which the infant Bolshevik Soviet state emerged. Eisenstein seized the opportunity of serving in the Red Army to become a radical theatre director, which led him into film as part of the first generation of Soviet film-makers, who would astonish the world in the late 1920s with films like The Battleship Potemkin and October. These films would shape the cultural and political landscape of the interwar years - championed by those who wanted to condemn the Great War as an imperialist struggle, and also foreshadowing the Second World War. Film historian Ian Christie untangles this complex story.
Wed, 16 Jul 2014 - 40 - Minds at War - Le Feu
Completed in 1916, Le Feu was the first explicit account of conditions at the front. French soldier Henri Barbusse's novel proved a revelation to a French public sold a sentimental line by the press of the time. Yet Le Feu, with its deep insights into the emotions of men at war, was not seen as damaging to home-front morale. Here was a new kind of writing in which rural dialects and working-class accents conveyed heroism, and could be literary, even transcendent. Dr Heather Jones reflects on Barbusse's novel.
Tue, 15 Jul 2014 - 39 - Minds at War - Thoughts for the Times on War and Death
The declaration of war in 1914 was initially met with jubilation by the people of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and, in Vienna, Sigmund Freud shared their mood. But, like his fellow-citizens, Freud expected a quick war. By February 1915, with two of his sons fighting and thousands of injured and traumatised soldiers returning from the front, his feelings had changed. Michael Shapira reflects on Freud's 1915 text, Thoughts for the Times on War and Death.
Mon, 14 Jul 2014 - 38 - Minds at War - The Memorandum on the Neglect of Science
Professor David Edgerton reflects on a WW1 clarion-call from the British scientific establishment. In a letter to The Times in 1916, many of the great names of British science declared their belief that both academic and applied science were being treated as Cinderella subjects. The Germans, they surmised, had got their act together and were outflanking the British military effort in chemical warfare, armaments and generally taking science more seriously. Edgerton finds out what was going on at the time and looks at how the First World War advanced British science.
Wed, 09 Jul 2014 - 37 - Minds at War - Der Krieg
In 1924, six years after the end of hostiliies, the painter Otto Dix, who had been a machine-gunner in the German Army, produced his 51 Der Krieg prints. Gruesome, hallucinatory, and terribly frank, these postcards of conflict tell the soldier's ghastly tale. Cartoonist Martin Rowson, whose own work is similarly direct and uncompromising, tells Dix's story and ponders why Der Krieg remains such a powerful statement.
Tue, 08 Jul 2014 - 36 - Minds at War - Non-Combatants and Others
Rose Macaulay is perhaps best remembered for her final novel, The Towers of Trebizond, but her biographer, Sarah LeFanu, has long believed that her earlier 1916 novel, Non-Combatants and Others, is a work of striking originality. She argues for its importance to our understanding of the impact of the First World War, not only on soldiers at the front, but on the entire nation.
Mon, 07 Jul 2014 - 35 - Minds at War - Paths of Glory
CRW Nevinson's painting Paths of Glory is a distant cry from the rallying recruitment posters that appeared at the start of the war. It depicts the bloated corpses of two dead soldiers, stretched out in the mud, against a backdrop of tangled barbed wire somewhere on the Western Front. Unsurprisingly, it was censored at the time. Allan Little considers the continuing power of Nevinson's painting and the role of art both in recruiting soldiers and in denouncing war.
Sun, 06 Jul 2014 - 34 - Free Thinking - Oh What A Lovely SavasSat, 05 Jul 2014
- 33 - Free Thinking - Wood and Trees: War and RemembranceFri, 04 Jul 2014
- 32 - Free Thinking - Balancing Power in WW1 and Now
The First World War shattered the power balance in Europe. As we confront an uncertain world order, who are the great powers today, how has their role changed and where do they now stand in determining geo-politics? Jonathan Powell and historians Margaret MacMillan, Orlando Figes and Adam Tooze explore the Great Powers with Anne McElvoy.
Thu, 03 Jul 2014 - 31 - Free Thinking - The Thirty-Nine Steps
John Buchan's The Thirty-Nine Steps first appeared in Blackwoods Magazine in August and September 1915 and depicts Europe on the edge of war in May and June 1914. It quickly became popular reading in the trenches and on the home front, and 100 years and three film adaptations later, its popularity is enduring. Matthew Sweet talks to biographer Andrew Lownie and scholars Dr Michael Redley and Dr Kate Macdonald about the connections between Buchan's own war experience and The 39 Steps, and to Professors Elleke Boehmer and Terence Ranger about how ideas about empire and adventure play out in the novel.
Wed, 02 Jul 2014 - 30 - Gavrilo Princip's Footprint
On the sunny morning of June 28 1914, Gavrilo Princip shot dead the Archduke Ferdinand and his wife Sophie in Sarajevo. Their assassination began a chain of events that would bring the world to war, destroy three empires and lead to the creation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Maria Margaronis travels to Belgrade and Sarajevo to unravel the many meanings of Princip then and now, discovering that Princip's past and present remain deeply contested, as current attempts to commemorate both his deeds and his memory book-end a century of conflict.
Tue, 01 Jul 2014 - 29 - Sound of Cinema - The First World War
Matthew Sweet looks at music for films set against the background of WW1, including Joseph Kosma's music for Jean Renoir's masterpiece La Grande Illusion. The First World War prompted a cinematic response even before the War was over and has continued to exercise the film maker's imagination ever since. From Charles Chaplin's Shoulder Arms in 1918 to Steven Spielberg's recent War Horse, stories and commentaries are varied and include some of the great moments in film and film-music.
Mon, 30 Jun 2014 - 28 - Nationalism The War That Changed the WorldMon, 30 Jun 2014
- 27 - Music Matters - The Legacy of WW1 in MusicSun, 29 Jun 2014
- 26 - Month of Madness - LondonFri, 27 Jun 2014
- 25 - Month of Madness - The French in St PetersburgThu, 26 Jun 2014
- 24 - Month of Madness - BerlinWed, 25 Jun 2014
- 23 - Month of Madness - ViennaTue, 24 Jun 2014
- 22 - Month of Madness - SarajevoMon, 23 Jun 2014
- 21 - WW1 At Home 12 - The Football Icon and The War PoetTue, 17 Jun 2014
- 20 - WW1 At Home 11 - The 'White Feather' Campaign & a Popular WW1 French TippleFri, 06 Jun 2014
- 19 - WW1 At Home 10 - Medical Breakthroughs & the 'Chocolate Soldier'Sat, 31 May 2014
- 18 - WW1 At Home 9 - Wartime Drunkeness & a Belgian Refugee's TaleFri, 23 May 2014
- 17 - WW1 At Home 8 - Conscientious ObjectorsThu, 15 May 2014
- 16 - WW1 At Home 7 - The Hartlepool Bombardment & the Glasgow Rent ProtestsTue, 13 May 2014
- 15 - Woman's Hour - Women and the War - A signaller's story
In 1918, Annie May Martin was a telegraphist working in France. Her role with the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps was to pass messages in morse code between front line troops and London. In an archive interview, she looks back on her life as a signaller, why they were called the ‘blue and white angels,’ and remembers the hostility she experienced at the hands of French civilians. Her reflections are included in IWM’s Lives of the First World War, launched today to create a digital memorial to mark the lives of more than eight million people in WWI. Project Manager Melanie Donnelly joins Jane Garvey to talk about the scale of the task ahead.
Mon, 12 May 2014 - 14 - WW1 At Home 6 - Women's Football, Anti-German Riots & the Soldier's SongFri, 02 May 2014
- 13 - WW1 At Home 5 - Brighton Pavilion: a Hospital for Indian TroopsFri, 25 Apr 2014
- 12 - WW1 At Home 4 - Nursing Heroines & Lost TreasureThu, 17 Apr 2014
- 11 - At Home 3 - The Spy on the Forth; Lizzie the Elephant; a Gardener Goes to WarFri, 11 Apr 2014
- 10 - WW1 At Home 2 - Zeppelin Raids; Airship Patrols; Scouts on StandbyFri, 04 Apr 2014
- 9 - WW1 At Home 1 - Spies, Bravery & Acme WhistlesFri, 28 Mar 2014
- 8 - The Cultural Front - Ep3: Kandinsky, Khaki & KissesSat, 22 Mar 2014
- 7 - The Cultural Front - Ep2 : Popular CultureSat, 15 Mar 2014
- 6 - The Cultural Front - Ep1 : Words for Battle
Francine Stock begins her exploration of the culture of the Great War in 1914 with the mobilization of the word. For more than 40 years the next war to come had been a staple of fiction. England had been invaded, bombed and conquered before a shot had ever been fired in anger and now the war was upon us. What unfolded in the first weeks in the towns of villages of Belgium turned the war into a cultural struggle for survival and intellectuals and authors were soon seen as crucial to the war effort. From Arnold Bennett to Israel Zangwill, the literary giants of Edwardian England went to war. Producer Mark Burman. Part of WW1 on the BBC - bbc.co.uk/ww1
Mon, 10 Mar 2014 - 5 - Woman's Hour Women and the War - a young widow's story
How a night out to Manchester’s Palace Theatre in 1914 was to change forever the lives of Kitty and her young husband Percy Morter. Looking back, Kitty describes the moment when music hall star Vesta Tilley put her hand on her husband’s shoulder and recruited him to the war effort. The archive interview from 1964 is being made available today through World War One At Home, a BBC and Imperial War Museums partnership. Jane Garvey is joined by Imperial War Museum curator Laura Clouting to talk about the projects. Part of World War One on the BBC. Discover more at bbc.co.uk/ww1
Mon, 24 Feb 2014 - 4 - Woman's Hour: Campaign for Nurses' War Memorial
From BBC Radio 4: During the First and Second World War at least 1700 nurses gave their lives in service, yet there is no official memorial to them. Jenni Murray talks to Yvonne McEwen, a historian at Edinburgh University and a former nurse who is leading a campaign for an official memorial for the nurses who served in the wars.
Mon, 17 Feb 2014 - 3 - The Great War of Words, Episode 2
From BBC Radio 4 Responsibility for the Great War has been a fierce battle for meaning ever since 1914. Michael Portillo examines how the history of the origins of the Great War and the issue of war guilt has, since 1914, frequently been a fierce battle for meaning with high stakes. Discover more at bbc.co.uk/ww1
Tue, 11 Feb 2014 - 2 - Woman's Hour: Changing Woman's Lives
From BBC Radio 4: How the war shaped the lives of a generation of women. While women in their thousands volunteered for war service and the number of women employed went up by more than a million by 1918, what power did women really achieve outside the home and how lasting was it? Joining Jenni Murray, Baroness Shirley Williams on the war's impact on the generation of her mother, Testament of Youth author Vera Brittain; writer and broadcaster Kate Adie; Joanna Bourke, Professor of History at Birkbeck College; and cultural historian Professor Maggie Andrews, University of Worcester. We also hear from Dr Jennian Geddes about the work of doctors Flora Murray and Louisa Garrett Anderson who established and ran the only British army hospital staffed entirely by women, treating wounded soldiers. Part of World War One on the BBC. Discover more at bbc.co.uk/ww1
Thu, 06 Feb 2014 - 1 - The Great War of Words, Episode 1
Michael Portillo reveals how our understanding of the war has been distorted through a century of intellectualising, interpretation and misinterpretation. In this first episode Michael Portillo examines how the German invasion of neutral Belgium in August 1914 transformed Britain's war into a moral cause. Part of World War One on the BBC. Discover more at bbc.co.uk/ww1
Tue, 04 Feb 2014
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