Mourning_and_Cult_of_the_Fallen ]@]@ BOOKMOBI # (D 0 8* @ IQ R [ c l4 u }/ H 8 | 8 d " m MOBI i 8 * P EXTH = e International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, Peter Gatrell, Oliver Janz, Heather Jones, Jennifer Keene, Alan Kramer, and Bill Nasson, issued by Freie Universität Berlin m pThis text is licensed under: CC by-NC-ND 3.0 Germany - Attribution, Non-commercial, No Derivative Works. g Portugal’s participation in the First World War, first in Africa and then on the European front, was marked by profound discord. In light of the crisis that swept across the nation in the wake of the war, which would culminate in an authoritarian regime, the young First Republic struggled to capitalize on the Allied victory. Within the context of a broader culture of war, we seek to analyze the construction of the official memory of this conflict. We analyze processes of remembrance, attempting to grasp their nature and whether they correspond to interpretations that see the violent experience of conflict as heralding a cultural rupture, one inherently associated with the brutalization of society and politics in the postwar period. en en d Silvia Correia 2Mourning and Cult of the Fallen (Portugal) l 2calibre (2.5.0) [http://calibre-ebook.com] i 9International Encyclopedia of the First World War i 1914-1918-Online i First World War i WW1 i 2Mourning and Cult of the Fallen (Portugal) q ,9b8d9826-70b1-4637-bcde-14a99b3fd722 p 4calibre:9b8d9826-70b1-4637-bcde-14a99b3fd722 EBOK j !2019-09-30T00:00:00+00:00 t Mourning and Cult of the Fallen (Portugal)