Discover how the First World War still shapes our world today.
The Living Memory of War: Britain and the First World War Centenary explores how history is not just remembered-but actively lived, shared, and reinterpreted across generations.
From national ceremonies to local community projects, from museum exhibitions to digital archives, this book reveals how the centenary of the First World War (2014-2018) transformed the way people in Britain engaged with the past.
This is not just a history of the war-it is a story of memory, identity, and connection.
Through powerful examples, the book examines:
- How public memory and heritage shape national identity
- The role of youth, education, and community participation in remembrance
- The rise of digital history and online archives in preserving the past
- The tension between academic history and popular memory
- The emotional power of remembrance in modern society
Why does the First World War still matter today?
This book answers that question by showing how remembrance is influenced by culture, politics, and personal experience-and how it continues to evolve in the digital age.
Perfect for students, researchers, educators, and anyone interested in history, heritage studies, memory studies, and modern Britain, this book offers a fresh and thought-provoking perspective on one of the most significant events of the twentieth century.
The past is not gone-it lives on in the way we remember. Keywords (for better discovery)
First World War, WW1 centenary, war memory, public history, heritage studies, British history, digital history, remembrance, cultural memory, war commemoration, identity, museums, community history