The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa
Military History has three primary audiences: the general public, academe, and the armed forces – each has its own beliefs regarding the purpose and utility of the military past. Recognising the value of a war history for South Africa, Jan Smuts created the Union War Histories section in 1941. Yet...
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Towarzystwo Wiedzy Obronnej
2021-03-01
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doaj-56637b643f0142b3ae2d31b041da3c272021-03-24T17:38:50ZengTowarzystwo Wiedzy ObronnejWiedza Obronna0209-00312021-03-01274110.34752/2021-a274The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South AfricaIan van der Waag0Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa Military History has three primary audiences: the general public, academe, and the armed forces – each has its own beliefs regarding the purpose and utility of the military past. Recognising the value of a war history for South Africa, Jan Smuts created the Union War Histories section in 1941. Yet the men appointed to write this history realised that they would never be able to satisfy all three competing readerships. This paper examines the research production of the Union War Histories section as well as the official and public response to their work, which is placed within a wider historiographical process. The notion of a historiographical progression – of an intersecting chain of counter narratives – is posited: accounts by journalists, official historians, personal narrators and regimental historians, leading to a post-participant historiography. This is a progression that seems to hold true for South Africa’s other wars, and indeed the wars of other countries. http://wiedzaobronna.edu.pl/index.php/wo/article/view/95historiographywar literatureofficial historysoldier narrativesmemory |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ian van der Waag |
spellingShingle |
Ian van der Waag The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa Wiedza Obronna historiography war literature official history soldier narratives memory |
author_facet |
Ian van der Waag |
author_sort |
Ian van der Waag |
title |
The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa |
title_short |
The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa |
title_full |
The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa |
title_fullStr |
The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Union War Histories and the Battle for the History ff the Second World War in South Africa |
title_sort |
union war histories and the battle for the history ff the second world war in south africa |
publisher |
Towarzystwo Wiedzy Obronnej |
series |
Wiedza Obronna |
issn |
0209-0031 |
publishDate |
2021-03-01 |
description |
Military History has three primary audiences: the general public, academe, and the armed forces – each has its own beliefs regarding the purpose and utility of the military past. Recognising the value of a war history for South Africa, Jan Smuts created the Union War Histories section in 1941. Yet the men appointed to write this history realised that they would never be able to satisfy all three competing readerships. This paper examines the research production of the Union War Histories section as well as the official and public response to their work, which is placed within a wider historiographical process. The notion of a historiographical progression – of an intersecting chain of counter narratives – is posited: accounts by journalists, official historians, personal narrators and regimental historians, leading to a post-participant historiography. This is a progression that seems to hold true for South Africa’s other wars, and indeed the wars of other countries.
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topic |
historiography war literature official history soldier narratives memory |
url |
http://wiedzaobronna.edu.pl/index.php/wo/article/view/95 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT ianvanderwaag theunionwarhistoriesandthebattleforthehistoryffthesecondworldwarinsouthafrica AT ianvanderwaag unionwarhistoriesandthebattleforthehistoryffthesecondworldwarinsouthafrica |
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