“To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain

During the Crimean War, civilian war correspondents, most notably William Russell, kept the British public informed about the mismanagement of the war. The administrative shortcomings and the suffering of wounded soldiers shocked the British public and raised concerns about the effectiveness of the...

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Main Author: Alison Fletcher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2007-12-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/10419
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author Alison Fletcher
author_facet Alison Fletcher
author_sort Alison Fletcher
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description During the Crimean War, civilian war correspondents, most notably William Russell, kept the British public informed about the mismanagement of the war. The administrative shortcomings and the suffering of wounded soldiers shocked the British public and raised concerns about the effectiveness of the army. Following the war, Mary Seacole a colonial subject from Jamaica, published a memoir of her experiences nursing sick soldiers in the Crimea. Her book, which valorized the soldiers and their military leader Lord Raglan, became an immediate best seller. Not only did her book reinforce confidence in the individual soldier and the army more generally, but she demonstrated forcefully that a woman could find a place for herself in the masculine preserve of war.
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spelling doaj-art-649552fb5cf04c1b83a58dd763260b0b2025-01-30T10:21:14ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492007-12-016610.4000/cve.10419“To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian BritainAlison FletcherDuring the Crimean War, civilian war correspondents, most notably William Russell, kept the British public informed about the mismanagement of the war. The administrative shortcomings and the suffering of wounded soldiers shocked the British public and raised concerns about the effectiveness of the army. Following the war, Mary Seacole a colonial subject from Jamaica, published a memoir of her experiences nursing sick soldiers in the Crimea. Her book, which valorized the soldiers and their military leader Lord Raglan, became an immediate best seller. Not only did her book reinforce confidence in the individual soldier and the army more generally, but she demonstrated forcefully that a woman could find a place for herself in the masculine preserve of war.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/10419
spellingShingle Alison Fletcher
“To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
title “To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
title_full “To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
title_fullStr “To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
title_full_unstemmed “To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
title_short “To us the war is a spectacle”: Domestic Consumption of the Crimean War in Victorian Britain
title_sort to us the war is a spectacle domestic consumption of the crimean war in victorian britain
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/10419
work_keys_str_mv AT alisonfletcher tousthewarisaspectacledomesticconsumptionofthecrimeanwarinvictorianbritain