Festival (M Shed)

Student Voices after The Great War

Between 1914 and 1918, young people fought and fell on the battlefield in unprecedented numbers. This event captures the voices of those who survived the conflict and returned to study at college or university, supported by the first government grants for higher education. While mourning the fallen, this generation built a student movement that promoted internationalist and pacifist ideas, including through founding the National Union of Students (NUS) in 1922.

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Commemoration Panel 2

Three talks examining aspects of the commemoration and remembrance of World War One: The In Flanders Fields Museum in Ypres, a cultural and transnational museum about WWI; Politics, Piers Morgan and the colour of Poppies; and ‘Remembrance on the Rocks’:  Scenes from Canada’s Great War Centenary.

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WW1’s Hidden Voices

Two critical presentations about the role of India, East Africa, Nigeria and the West Indies in WWI: Cultural Representations of World War One and other wars: how colonies are kept invisible; Colonial realities of WWI: uncovering the involvement and experience of peoples from British colonies.

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Mutiny

Tony T presents his documentary ‘Mutiny’ which looks at the British Caribbean experience of the First World War and its legacies, as revealed by the last surviving veterans of the British West Indies Regiment.

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War School

Set against the backdrop of Remembrance the controversial and challenging documentary reveals how, faced with unprecedented opposition to its wars, the British government is using a series of new and targeted strategies to promote support for the military.

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Making It Home

Film and photographic exhibition. Making it Home is the story of eleven ex-servicemen who returned from the Great War to live and farm on Cleenish Island in Upper Lough Erne, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.

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