John M. MacKenzie
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Introduction
Popular imperialism and the military
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Between 1800 and 1900 the reputation of the military in Britain was transformed. The 'rapacious and licentious soldiery' came to have a wholly different image in popular culture. After the vital watershed of the Crimean War the military came to concentrate more on the enemy without than the enemy within. A tradition of Christian militarism developed from the 1860s and the Church increasingly gave its blessing to the army. Chaplains were appointed and eventually went into uniform. Military imagery entered the argot of the hymnal and social Christianity, in the shape of the Salvation Army, temperance movements and youth organisations, assumed quasi-military forms. From the 1870s institutional reform played its part. Military entertainments became an important aspect of the popular culture of the period, in music and ceremony, music hall, juvenile literature and all forms of hagiography, journalism, art, theatre, pageants and displays.

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