Dave Russell
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‘We carved our way to glory’
The British soldier in music hall song and sketch, c. 1880–1914
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This chapter examines the ways in which music hall song and sketch structured popular debate over the role and place of the army, from approximately the end of the 1870s until the outbreak of the First World War. It analysis the changing levels of coverage given by the music hall to the army in general and to its personnel, regiments and campaigns. Most military songs and sketches dealt with current events but, significantly, certain past conflicts, or rather specific engagements within past conflicts, were regularly dealt with. The chapter also examines the three key stock representations of the soldier including romeo, fighting man and veteran. As the twentieth-century progressed, military values came to hold increasing sway over British society, not only in that 'unprecented adulatory attitudes towards Britain's professional soldiers' were exhibited.

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