The Bureaucratization of Death: The First World War, Families, and the State.

IF 1.1 1区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Twentieth Century British History Pub Date : 2022-11-22 DOI:10.1093/tcbh/hwac001
Ann-Marie Foster
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Abstract

After the First World War the British state tried to show the families of the dead their thanks, and memorialize the dead, through the two-minute silence and the creation of the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior. However, before families of deceased servicepeople encountered the state through national commemorations they encountered it through the administrative paperwork of death. Other than brief mentions in wider works, the bureaucracy of death is remarkably absent from discussions of death, yet the paperwork associated with death was a significant part of family experiences of bereavement, particularly in wartime. This article argues that state bureaucracy played a key role in defining people's experience of wartime bereavement, both practically, through the paperwork sent, but also temporally, by controlling when and how families could carry out grave-related elements of mourning, such as choosing an epitaph. Over the course of the early inter-war period, the bureaucracy of death encountered by the families of the war dead could profoundly shape their experience of loss.

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死亡的官僚化:第一次世界大战、家庭与国家。
第一次世界大战结束后,英国政府试图通过默哀两分钟和建立无名战士墓,向阵亡将士家属表示感谢,并纪念阵亡将士。然而,在阵亡军人家属通过国家纪念活动与国家相遇之前,他们是通过死亡的行政文书工作与国家相遇的。除了在更广泛的著作中简单提及外,死亡的官僚主义在有关死亡的讨论中明显缺席,然而与死亡相关的文书工作是家庭丧亲经历的重要组成部分,尤其是在战争时期。本文认为,国家官僚机构在界定人们的战时丧亲经历方面发挥了关键作用,这既体现在实际工作中,如发送文件,也体现在时间上,如控制家庭何时以及如何开展与坟墓相关的哀悼活动,如选择墓志铭。在战时初期,战死者家属所遇到的死亡官僚主义会深刻影响他们的丧亲体验。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Twentieth Century British History covers the variety of British history in the twentieth century in all its aspects. It links the many different and specialized branches of historical scholarship with work in political science and related disciplines. The journal seeks to transcend traditional disciplinary boundaries, in order to foster the study of patterns of change and continuity across the twentieth century. The editors are committed to publishing work that examines the British experience within a comparative context, whether European or Anglo-American.
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