B. John and E. Partridge, The Long Trail -What the British Soldier Sang and Said in the Great War of, 1914.

J. Brophy and E. Partridge, Daily Telegraph Dictionary of Tommies' Songs and Slang

F. Davies and G. Maddocks, Bloody Red Tabs: General Officer Casualties of the Great War, 1914.

P. Fussell, The Great War and Modern Memory, 2000.

H. Goorney, The Theatre Workshop Story, 1981.

J. Littlewood and T. Workshop, Oh What a Lovely War, 1967.

J. Mullen, The Show Must Go On! Popular Song in Britain in the First World War
URL : https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01812786

, Propaganda and Dissent in British Popular Song during the Great War, Textes et Contextes, 2000.

F. T. Nettleingham, Tommy's Tunes. London: Erskine Macdonald, More Tommy's Tunes, 1917.

B. Newman, Another opening, another show: Kat and the Kings and Oh What a Lovely War! " . Dancing Times, 1998.

N. Offenstadt, 14-18 Aujourd'hui

. Paris, , 2010.

R. Palmer and L. Macdonald, What a Lovely War: British Soldiers' Songs from the Boer War to the Present Day, 1990.

M. Pegler, Soldiers' Songs and Slang of the Great War, 2014.

P. Tagg, Music's Meanings, 2012.

M. Sweet, Oh What A Lovely War ? why the battle still rages, 2014.

P. Notes, R. Fussell, L. Palmer, and . Macdonald, The Great War and Modern Memory 2 See for example

T. Nettleingham, Tommy's Tunes, 1917 and More Tommy's Tunes, 1918.

E. Brophy and . Partridge, The Long Trail 5 For example M. Arthur, When This Bloody War Is Over: Soldiers' Songs of the First World War, and M. Pegler, Soldiers' Songs and Slang of the Great War 6 Burnley News, 1919.

. Also, indeed, different from German or French soldiers' songs, but this cannot be covered here. A full analysis of British soldiers' songs can be found in chapter, The Show Must Go On! Popular Song in Britain in the First World War

, Similarly, music hall songs about the glory of war, or calling for men to volunteer, almost completely disappear after the first few months of the war

. Arthur, When this Bloody War? p, p.89

, 11 From Brophy's introduction to the 1965 edition

, 13 " I want to go home. I want to go home/ I don't want to go in the trenches no more/ Where whizzbangs and shrapnel, They whistle and roar./ Take me over the sea/ Where the Alleyman can't get at me/Oh my! I don't want to die./ I want to go home, 1930.

, 15 Dundee Courier 12 sept, 1939.

, The song about General Shute, which ends " A shit would be shot without mourners/ if someone shot that shit Shute " comes to mind

A. , Pop Goes the Major, 1920.

J. Brophy and E. Partridge, Daily Telegraph Dictionary of Tommies' Songs and Slang, p. viii, p.18

T. Ashworth and . Warfare, The Live and Let Live System, 1914.

, Littlewood and Theatre Workshop, Oh What a Lovely War

, BBC radio documentary about Charles Chilton's original show was broadcast. 26 P. Tagg, Music's Meanings, p.451, 2014.

H. Goorney, The Theatre Workshop Story, p.127

M. Sweet, Oh What A Lovely War ? why the battle still rages" 29, Textes et Contextes N°, vol.6, p.128, 2011.

J. Littlewood, Joan's book, p.694
DOI : 10.5040/9781474233255

, 32 Daily Mail, 2014.

B. Bond, The Unquiet Western Front, p.p .i
DOI : 10.1017/CBO9780511496158

F. Davies and G. Maddocks, Bloody Red Tabs, issue.2

, 35 Sunday Times, 1970.

B. Newman, Another opening, another show: Kat and the Kings and Oh what a lovely war! " 37 <http

, 38 All the examples which are quoted here were easily found on YouTube, 2014.

. Arthur, When This Bloody War is Over?, p.76

, 43 Not to be confused with the Swedish rock group, the Spinning Jennies 44 The anti-war demonstration in London on the 15th February 2003 was estimated by organizers to count 2 million people, p.0

, Anti-war-protest-Britains-biggest-demo.html> (retrieved 10, 2014.

, 46 The Independent, 2014.

N. Offenstadt, Aujourd'hui, pp.14-1811

F. S. See-for-example and . Barrett, Music-evoked nostalgia