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UK funding (597 162 £) : Portes d’entrée de la Première Guerre mondiale Ukri01/01/2014 UK Research and Innovation, Royaume Uni

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Portes d’entrée de la Première Guerre mondiale

Abstract Gateways consists of Kent, Brighton, Greenwich and Portsmouth HEIs together with an extensive range of collaborators and will provide a gateway for wide public access to: 1) a network of research excellence in First World War Studies 2) skills and resources to develop a range of outputs 3) the geographical gateway to the Western Front and wider war. Through Gateways the British public will be given the opportunity to engage with, understand and interpret a historical event that played a fundamental role in the shaping of the contemporary world and their place within it. In exploring the local, wherever located, they will engage with the global. They will also engage with their own preconceptions and be encouraged to test and question their origins. Gateways will then use this as a base to examine the (dis)connection between academic/official history and popular perceptions. Gateways will use the combination of its recognised research strengths and high profile in First World War Studies, practitioner skills, resources and geography to explore themes universal to the experience of the First World War: The global nature of the conflict. The importance of the sea and overseas communications. The blurred line between fighting and home fronts; how people understood the nature of the conflict and the acts of combat. The effect of transplanting communities and creating new ones. Moments of culture clash and moments of culture harmony. How different memories and legacies emerged from the conflict, why some endured, mutated or were marginalised. Gateways has three elements: 1) Core members: building on the existing research interests and public engagement links centred on the First World War anniversaries between Brighton, Greenwich, Kent and Portsmouth HEIs. For example, Kent and Portsmouth are developing a research network exploring the experience of Imperial port cities during the conflict in association with the Institute of Commonwealth Studies; Greenwich and Kent are working on a programme for schools and colleges; Brighton and Portsmouth have collaborated on a photographic project with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. 2) Project collaborators: extending and exploiting existing partnerships with non-HEI bodies for the benefit of the wider community. Examples include: Chatham Dockyard Museum, Cognitive Media, Hampshire County Council, Kent County Council, Maidstone Museum, Marlowe Theatre (Canterbury), National Maritime Museum, Portsmouth City Museums, Royal Engineers Museum, Library and Archive (hereafter REMLA), Screen South, War Memorials Trust. 3) Network members: drawing in other academics from a wide range of disciplines with expertise relevant to the objectives of Gateways. For a list of key network members see pp6-7. Gateways is geographically based in a region that has a unique historical status: SE England was the Gateway to the Western Front and was the hinge on which the British war effort hung. Its ports of Southampton, Newhaven, Folkestone, Dover and the naval bases of Chatham and Portsmouth were the nodal points. The region was a militarised zone covered with defence lines and fortifications including the British army's main base at Aldershot. It was a liminal space between fighting and home fronts; a cultural and racial melting pot containing imperial contingents (Africans, Canadians, Indians and West Indians), Chinese Labour Corps camps and large numbers of Belgian refugees. The region became the home of vast hospital encampments which further ensured that the presence of the war and its effects remained constant.
Category Research Grant
Reference AH/L008297/1
Status Closed
Funded period start 01/01/2014
Funded period end 28/02/2018
Funded value £597 162,00
Source https://gtr.ukri.org/projects?ref=AH%2FL008297%2F1

Participating Organisations

University of Kent
Wakefield Girls' High School
IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM
Buckinghamshire Military Museum Trust
Bexhill Museum
Portsmouth Museums
The Western Front Association
Aston University
Centre for Buckinghamshire Studies
Richmond School and Sixth Form College
The Keep, Brighton
European Union
THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
Duke of York's Cinema Brighton
University of Chichester
Thackray Museum
The Real Junk Food Project
Camden Road Education Arts and Theatre Enterprise
Simon Langton School for Girls
National Media Museum
Fabrica Gallery Brighton
The Royal Engineers Museum, Library & Archive
Theatre Royal York
Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
South East Museum Development Programme
University of Huddersfield
The Museum of Military Medicine
Leeds Museums and Galleries
Brixton Library
University of Portsmouth
Wakefield Cathedral
Heritage Lottery Fund
UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER
Ossett Academy and Sixth Form College
National Maritime Museum
Hyde Park Picture House, Leeds
Marlowe Theatre, Canterbury
Brighton Pavilion and Museums
University of Southampton
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
University of Leeds
British Council
The Nursing Memorial Appeal
The Gallipoli Association
Threadbare Theatre Company
Lives of the First World War
Bishop Grosseteste University
Westgate Community Trust (Canterbury) LTD
Liverpool Hope University
Iranian Community of Hull
Mass Observation Archive
In Flanders Fields Museum
Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport
Goldsmiths, University of London

Cette annonce se réfère à une date antérieure et ne reflète pas nécessairement l’état actuel. L’état actuel est présenté à la page suivante : University of Kent, Canterbury, Royaume Uni.