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Issue Details: First known date: 2013... 2013 Lights, Camera, Fire! Cinematic Representations of World War I's Middle East Front and its Palestine Campaign
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Two important Australian feature films, separated by nearly 50 years, form the basis of this article's examination of World War I's Middle East front through a study of the cinematic corpus referring to the war and its images. Charles Chauvel's 40,000 Horsemen (1941) and Simon Wincer's The Lighthorsemen (1987) offer a spring board for the exploration of the visual aspects of viewers' historical, social and cultural memory shaping the nearly forgotten story of the forces of the British Empire that fought in Palestine and Eastern Transjordan. The cinematic medium developed its own unique signs for wars, usually portraying wartime as a romantic epoch, and not as death and destruction.' (Author's introduction)

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Last amended 22 Jan 2014 11:27:15
170-189 Lights, Camera, Fire! Cinematic Representations of World War I's Middle East Front and its Palestine Campaignsmall AustLit logo Journal of the Royal Australian Historical Society
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