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48 - No(Wo)man's Land: Writing history at the intersections of gender and First World War Studies

Oh! What a lovely podcast

Release Date: 07/01/2024

63 - Blackadder show art 63 - Blackadder

Oh! What a lovely podcast

Was Blackadder Goes Forth the most powerful portrayal of the First World War ever put on television? In this episode of Oh! What a Lovely Podcast, Jessica, Chris and Angus take a look at the enduring legacy of Blackadder Goes Forth. First broadcast on BBC One in 1989, the series blended sharp wit and biting satire with a surprisingly moving look at life – and death – on the Western Front. The team discuss how the show evolved, the historical realities behind its humour, and why that unforgettable final scene still resonates decades later. They also explore how Blackadder helped shape...

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62 - Fall of Eagles show art 62 - Fall of Eagles

Oh! What a lovely podcast

How did the First World War bring down Europe’s great dynasties, and how did the BBC retell that story on screen? In this episode of Oh What a Lovely Podcast, we look at Fall of Eagles, the 1974 BBC drama that charts the decline of the Romanovs, Hohenzollerns, and Habsburgs. Across 13 episodes, the series follows the personal rivalries, dynastic struggles, and political failures that led to the collapse of three empires during the Great War. Created by John Elliot and produced by Stuart Burge, the show boasted an impressive cast and scripts from writers such as Jack Pulman (I, Claudius) and...

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61 - War-Time In Our Street show art 61 - War-Time In Our Street

Oh! What a lovely podcast

In this episode of Oh! What a Lovely Podcast, Angus, Chris, Jessica, and returning guest Ann-Marie Einhaus discuss War-Time in Our Street by J. E. Buckrose.   Set in a fictional Yorkshire village, these stories capture everyday resilience, humour, and quiet courage — from blackout chapel services and food shortages to romances and small acts of kindness amid wartime hardships.   Buckrose, the pen name of Annie Edith Jameson, was a prolific writer who produced more than forty novels exploring domestic life and family tensions with gentle humour. War-Time in Our Street offers a...

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60 - The Boy I Loved show art 60 - The Boy I Loved

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What do young adults think of First World War fiction aimed at them? In this episode of Oh What a Lovely Podcast, we hand the mic to a group of young readers to hear their thoughts on by William Hussey, a novel exploring the impact of war on love, identity and loss. After their thoughtful reviews, Chris, Jessica and Angus reflect on the responses and what they reveal about how the war is understood today.

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59 - The Great War and Modern Memory at 50 show art 59 - The Great War and Modern Memory at 50

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What makes a 50-year-old book on WWI still essential reading? In this episode, Angus, Jessica, and Chris are joined by Ian Isherwood and Steven Trout, authors of But It Still Goes On: Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory at 50. We revisit Fussell’s classic, exploring its legacy, impact, and the debates it continues to spark in the world of war literature and memory studies.   References:Ian Isherwood and Steven Trout, But it Still Goes On: Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory at 50, The Journal of Military History Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory ---...

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58 - The Monocled Mutineer show art 58 - The Monocled Mutineer

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What happens when a controversial real-life figure becomes the centre of one of the BBC’s most politically charged wartime dramas? In this episode, we revisit The Monocled Mutineer (1986), Alan Bleasdale’s adaptation of the story of Percy Toplis — alleged ringleader of the 1917 Étaples mutiny. The four-part series drew huge audiences but quickly became a flashpoint in debates over historical accuracy, media bias, and the BBC’s role in shaping national memory. We unpack the drama’s reception, the historical evidence (or lack thereof) behind Toplis’s role in the mutiny, and how the...

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57 - Dope Girls show art 57 - Dope Girls

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What was the real story behind the BBC series Dope Girls? In this episode of Oh What a Lovely Podcast, we dive into the world of Soho’s underground nightlife in the 1920s, as seen in the BBC’s new drama Dope Girls. The series takes inspiration from Marek Kohn’s book Dope Girls: The Birth of the British Drug Underground and brings to life the turbulent years after the First World War, when jazz clubs, crime, and vice flourished in London. Joining us to separate fact from fiction is Professor Matthew Houlbrook, a leading historian of 20th-century Britain. We...

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56 - Reginald Hill show art 56 - Reginald Hill

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What happens when a late-twentieth-century detective novelist develops strong opinions about the First World War?   This month Angus, Jessica and Chris discuss Reginald Hill's The Wood Beyond (1995) and the short story 'Silent Night' from the collection A Candle for Christmas (2023). Along the way, we consider the significance of the genealogy boom to the historiography of the war, the politics of the Shot at Dawn campaign and the tradition of novelists inventing fictional regiments.   References: Midsummer Murders The Sweeney Who Do You Think You Are? Not Forgotten (2005-2009)...

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55 - Sapphire and Steel show art 55 - Sapphire and Steel

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What happens when you combine the First World War with a 1970s cult sci-fi classic?   This month we watched 'Assignment 2' from the television series Sapphire & Steel which features a ghostly First World War soldier haunting an abandoned railway station. Along the way we discuss differing approaches to sacrifice, the idea of an 'unjust' death, and where the show sits on our ongoing 'creepy' list.

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54 - Ian Isherwood, The Battalion and Digital History show art 54 - Ian Isherwood, The Battalion and Digital History

Oh! What a lovely podcast

What do you do when a student brings you a collection of family papers in a Harrods tin?  This month, Chris, Angus and Jessica speak to Professor Ian Isherwood about his new book, The Battalion: Citizen Soldiers at War on the Western Front. Along the way, we discuss developing digital humanities projects, the involvement of J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis in rambling and the proliferation of bad war poetry. References: Ian Isherwood, The Battalion: Citizen Soldiers at War on the Western Front Ian Isherwood, The First World War Letters of H.J.C. Peirs Michael Roper, Afterlives of War: A...

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More Episodes
This month Angus, Chris and Jessica discuss Jessica's professorial inaugural lecture, 'No (Wo)man's Land: writing history at the intersection of gender and First World War studies'.
 
Along the way we consider the problem of masculinity as an empty analytic category, the importance of the centenary for the study of the First World War and what Jessica might have done if she hadn't gone in to academia. There is also a sneak preview of exciting forthcoming and future projects from all three of us.
 
 
References:
Jessica Meyer, Men of War: Masculinity and the First World War in Britain (2008)
Jessica Meyer, Equal Burden: The Men of the Royal Army Medical Corps in the First World War (2019)
Kate Adie, Fighting on the Home Front: The Legacy of Women in World War One (2013)
Kate Adie, ‘Don't write first world war women out of history’, The Guardian, 23rd September, 2013
Barbara Tuchman, The Guns of August (1962)
Deborah Thom, Nice Girls and Rude Girls: Women Workers in World War 1 (1998)
Tammy Proctor, Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World War (2003)
Margaret MacMillan, Peacemakers (2001)
Adrian Gregory, The Last Great War (2008)
Jeremy Paxman, Great Britain's Great War (2013)
John Tosh and Michael Roper (eds), Manful Assertions: Masculinities in Britain Since 1800 (1991)
Denise Riley, Am I That Name?: Feminism and the Category of ‘Women’ (1988)
R.W. Connell, Masculinities (1993)
Joan W. Scott, ‘Rewriting History’ in Margaret R. Higonnet, et. al. (eds), Behind the Lines: Gender and the Two World Wars (2008)
Branden Little (ed), Humanitarianism in the Era of the First World War, special issue ofFirst World War Studies, vol.5, no.1 (2014)
Heather Perry, Recycling the Disabled: Army, Medicine, and Modernity in World War I Germany (2014)
Michele Moyd, Violent Intermediaries: African Soldiers, Conquest, and Everyday Colonialism in German East Africa (2014)
Susan Grayzel, Women and the First World War (2002)
Alexander Mayhew, Making Sense of the Great War: Crisis, Englishness and Morale on the Western Front (2024)
Peter Mandler, ‘The Problem with Cultural History’, Cultural and Social History, vol.1, no.1 (2004), 94-117.
Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory (1975)
Robert Graves, Good-bye to All That (1929)
Erich Maria Remarque, All Quiet on the Western Front (1929)
Rosa Maria Bracco, Merchants of Hope: British Middlebrow Writers and the First World War (1993)
Pat Barker, Regeneration (1991)
Sebastian Faulks, Birdsong (1993)
Alison Light, Forever England: Femininity, Literature, and Conservatism Between the Wars (1991)
Jessica Meyer, Chris Kempshall and Markus Pöhlman, ‘Life and Death of Soldiers’, 1914-18 Online, 7th February, 2022
Katherine Arden, The Warm Hands of Ghosts (2024)