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. 8 See Kate Ariotti, Captive Anzacs: Australian POWs of the Ottomans during the First World War (Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 2018); Santanu Das (ed.), Race, Empire and First World War Writing (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011). 9 Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16
-Rouzeau and Christophe Prochasson, Sortir de la Grande Guerre. Le monde et l’apres 1918 (Paris: Tallandier, 2008). For a historiographical review of sorties de guerre , see Cosima Flateau, ‘Les sorties de guerre. Une introduction’, Les Cahiers Sirice , 17:3 (2016), 5–14. 11 Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16:1 (2019), 5
Details of numbers of New Zealand servicemen who returned during and after the war can be consulted at https://nzhistory.govt.nz/war/public-service-at-war/repatriation-of-returned-servicemen (accessed 3 March 2021). 13 On Australia's ‘exit’ from the war, for example, see Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16:1 (2019), 5–19. The process of
McCracken and Curson, ‘Flu downunder’, pp. 112–14. 61 Ibid ., p. 116. For more on the return of Australian troops after the war, see Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16:1 (2019), 5–19. 62
). 2 On this notion, see Cosima Flateau, ‘Les sorties de guerre. Une introduction’, Les Cahiers Sirice , 17:3 (2016), 5–14; Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16:1 (2019), 5–19. 3 Réal Bélanger, Henri Bourassa. Le fascinant destin d’un homme libre (1868–1914) (Québec: Presses de l’université Laval
–1922 (London: Macmillan, 1981). 7 Bruno Cabanes and Guillaume Piketty, ‘Sortir de la guerre: Jalons pour une histoire en chantier’, Histoire@Politique , 3 (March 2007), 1 ; Romain Fathi and Bart Ziino, ‘Coming home: Australians’ sorties de guerre after the First World War’, History Australia , 16:1 (2009), 5–19; Flateau, ‘La sortie de guerre de l’Empire ottoman’, pp. 29
’s seminal study Subculture: The Meaning of Style (1979) argued that youth culture was ‘a succession of differential responses to the Black immigrant presence in Britain from the 1950s onwards’, part of the wider phenomenon that Wendy Webster has described as the empire ‘coming home’. 12 This took different forms in different contexts. This chapter bolsters that understanding by
emigration after demobilisation was widespread, see Alan Allport, Demobbed: Coming Home After World War Two (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009) , pp. 212–13. 41 A lower, but still significant proportion of the enquiries filed under British subjects rather than service men also mentioned time spent in South Africa, 67 out of 271. NASA, BNS 1/1/410–412. 42 Hammerton and Thomson found a similar connection between migration and existing relationships
been there for centuries. I was coming home. I am the sugar at the bottom of the English cup of tea. I am the sweet tooth, the sugar plantations that rotted generations of English children’s teeth … That is the outside history that is inside the history of the English. There is no English history without that other history. 33
his Coming, Coming Home. Conversations II (St Martin: House of Nehesi, 2000), p. 24. 23 Stuart Hall, ‘The formation of a diasporic intellectual’, in David Morley and Kuan-Hsing Chen (eds), Stuart Hall: critical dialogues in cultural studies (London: Routledge, 1996), p. 501