1.
History - LibGuides at University of Exeter. http://libguides.exeter.ac.uk/HistoryHomePage.
2.
BBC iWonder - Did Oh What a Lovely War shape our view of WW1? http://www.bbc.co.uk/guides/zws9xnb.
3.
Paget, D. Popularising popular history: ‘Oh What A Lovely War’ and the sixties. Critical Survey 2, 117–127 (1990).
4.
Dan Todman. The Great War. (Hambledon & London).
5.
Oh! what a lovely film. The Times.
6.
Chris Hastings, ‘Revealed: How the family of WW1 commander tried to ban the film Oh! What a Lovely War...’ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2845729/How-family-WW1-commander-tried-ban-film-Oh-Lovely-War-thought-sordid-insult-memory.html.
7.
Matthew Sweet, ‘Oh, What a Lovely War: Why the battle still rages’ (2014). http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/theatre/10604911/Oh-What-a-Lovely-War-Why-the-battle-still-rages.html.
8.
Badsey, Stephen. Blackadder Goes Forth and the ‘Two Western Fronts’ debate’. in The historian, television and television history 113–125 (University of Luton Press, 2001).
9.
Bond, Brian. Thinking the unthinkable. in The Unquiet Western Front 75–101 (Cambridge University Press).
10.
Sheffield, Gary. Oh what a futile war,? the first world war in british and american memory. in Forgotten victory: the First World War : myths and realities 1–24 (Review, 2002).
11.
JONES, H. As the centenary approaches: the regeneration of first world war historiography. The Historical Journal 56, 857–878 (2013).
12.
Review by:                          Michael S. Neiberg. Review: Revisiting the Myths: New Approaches to the Great War. Contemporary European History 13, 505–515 (2004).
13.
Purseigle, P. A very French debate: the 1914-1918 war culture. Journal of War & Culture Studies 1, 9–14 (2007).
14.
Lynn-Jones, S. M. Detente and Deterrence: Anglo-German Relations, 1911-1914. International Security 11, (1986).
15.
Mulligan, William. Security and expansion: the great powers and geopolitics, 1871-1914. in The Origins Of The First World War 23–91 (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
16.
Offer, A. Going to War in 1914: A Matter of Honor? Politics & Society 23, 213–241 (1995).
17.
Horne, J. Introduction: mobilizing for ‘total war’, 1914-1918. in State, Society and Mobilization in Europe during the First World War (Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare) 1–17 (Cambridge University Press).
18.
Pennell, Catriona. Outbreak of War, July to August. in A kingdom united: popular responses to the outbreak of the First World War in Britain and Ireland 22–56 (Oxford University Press, 2012).
19.
Strachan, Hew. Conclusion: The Ideas of 1914. in The First World War: Vol.1: To arms 1114–1139 (Oxford University Press, 2001).
20.
FOLEY, R. T. Dumb donkeys or cunning foxes? Learning in the British and German armies during the Great War. International Affairs 90, 279–298 (2014).
21.
David French. The Meaning of Attrition, 1914-1916. The English Historical Review 103, 385–405 (1988).
22.
Neiberg, Michael S. Chapters 6 and 7. in Fighting the Great War: a global history 150–203 (Harvard University Press, 2006).
23.
Beyond the ‘Learning Curve’ by William Philpott (2009). https://rusi.org/commentary/beyond-learning-curve-british-armys-military-transformation-first-world-war.
24.
Bibliography of the Battle of the Somme [Part 1] by Ross Davies. http://www.history.ac.uk/reviews/review/2000.
25.
Ferguson, Niall. The Death Instinct: Why Men Fought. in The pity of war 339–366 (Basic Books, 1999).
26.
Smith, Leonard V. Remobilizing the citizen-soldier through the French army mutinies of 1917. in State, Society and Mobilization in Europe during the First World War (Studies in the Social and Cultural History of Modern Warfare) 144–159 (Cambridge University Press).
27.
Alex Watson. Self-Deception and Survival: Mental Coping Strategies on the Western Front, 1914-18. Journal of Contemporary History 41, 247–268 (2006).
28.
Barrett, M. Subalterns at War. Interventions 9, 451–474 (2007).
29.
Killingray, D. The War in Africa. in The Oxford illustrated history of the First World War 92–103 (Oxford University Press, 2000).
30.
Strachan, H. The First World War as a global war. First World War Studies 1, 3–14 (2010).
31.
Grayzel, Susan. Liberating Women? in Evidence, history, and the Great War: historians and the impact of 1914-18 113–134 (Berghahn Books, 2005).
32.
Horne, John. Social Identity in War: France, 1914-1918. in Men, women, and war 119–135 (Lilliput Press, 1993).
33.
Levine, P. Battle Colors: Race, Sex, and Colonial Soldiery in World War I. Journal of Women’s History 9, 104–130 (1998).
34.
Deist, Wilhelm. The Military Collapse of the German Empire. in The World War I reader 297–311 (New York University Press, 2007).
35.
Sheffield, Gary. 1918: Victory on the Western Front. in Forgotten victory: the First World War : myths and realities 221–263 (Review, 2002).
36.
Winter, J. M. Some paradoxes of the First World War. in The upheaval of war 9–42 (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
37.
Cabanes, B. 1919: Aftermath. in The Cambridge History of the First World War (ed. Winter, J.) 172–198 (Cambridge University Press, 2013). doi:10.1017/CHO9780511675669.010.
38.
Antoine Prost. The Impact of War on French and German Political Cultures. The Historical Journal 37, 209–217 (1994).
39.
Steiner, Z. S. New Dawn? Stabilization in Western Europe After Locarno. in The lights that failed: European international history, 1919-1933 vol. Oxford history of modern Europe 387–456 (Oxford University Press, 2005).
40.
Heather Jones, ‘Memory and Meaning in the Commemoration of the First World War’, (2014) URL. https://www.ippr.org/juncture/memory-and-meaning-in-the-commemoration-of-the-first-world-war.
41.
Mullen, J. Experiences and contradictions. Revue française de civilisation britannique XX, (2015).
42.
Mycock, A. The First World War Centenary in the UK: ‘A Truly National Commemoration’? The Round Table 103, 153–163 (2014).