Tom Hulme
Queen's University Belfast
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Tom Hulme.
Urban History | 2017
Tom Hulme
Historical pageantry emerged in 1905 as the brainchild of the theatrical impresario Louis Napoleon Parker. Large casts of volunteers re-enacted successive scenes of local history, as crowds of thousands watched on, in large outdoor arenas. As the press put it, Britain had caught ‘pageant fever’. Towards the end of the 1920s, there was another outburst of historical pageantry. Yet, in contrast to the Edwardian period, when pageants took place in small towns, this revival was particularly vibrant in large industrial towns and cities. This article traces the popularity of urban pageantry to an inter-war ‘civic publicity’ movement. In doing so, it reassesses questions of local cultural decline; the role of local government; and the relationship of civic responsibility to popular theatre.
Planning Perspectives | 2017
Tom Hulme
For a time in the 1920s and 1930s it was popular, and commercially lucrative, for social critics to go looking for the ‘real’ England. What they found when they crossed the supposed North–South div...
Historical Research | 2017
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Charlotte Tupman
This article examines the ways in which the First World War was represented in historical pageants during the interwar period. Pageants in this period are often overlooked as sites of commemoration and dramatic representation. Three types of pageant are identified: those that portrayed the war hyper-realistically, those which relied on symbolism and allegory to convey messages about war and peace, and those which sought to incorporate the war into the longer histories of the communities whose pasts they depicted. The article argues that ‘traditional’ forms of representation of the past proved to be resilient features of popular commemoration and remembrance.
Historical Research | 2017
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Charlotte Tupman
This article examines the ways in which the First World War was represented in historical pageants during the interwar period. Pageants in this period are often overlooked as sites of commemoration and dramatic representation. Three types of pageant are identified: those that portrayed the war hyper-realistically, those which relied on symbolism and allegory to convey messages about war and peace, and those which sought to incorporate the war into the longer histories of the communities whose pasts they depicted. The article argues that ‘traditional’ forms of representation of the past proved to be resilient features of popular commemoration and remembrance.
Historical Research | 2017
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Charlotte Tupman
This article examines the ways in which the First World War was represented in historical pageants during the interwar period. Pageants in this period are often overlooked as sites of commemoration and dramatic representation. Three types of pageant are identified: those that portrayed the war hyper-realistically, those which relied on symbolism and allegory to convey messages about war and peace, and those which sought to incorporate the war into the longer histories of the communities whose pasts they depicted. The article argues that ‘traditional’ forms of representation of the past proved to be resilient features of popular commemoration and remembrance.
Centre for Metropolitan History | 2016
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Charlotte Tupman
This article examines the ways in which the First World War was represented in historical pageants during the interwar period. Pageants in this period are often overlooked as sites of commemoration and dramatic representation. Three types of pageant are identified: those that portrayed the war hyper-realistically, those which relied on symbolism and allegory to convey messages about war and peace, and those which sought to incorporate the war into the longer histories of the communities whose pasts they depicted. The article argues that ‘traditional’ forms of representation of the past proved to be resilient features of popular commemoration and remembrance.
Twentieth Century British History | 2015
Tom Hulme
Journal of British Studies | 2015
Tom Hulme
International Journal of Research on History Didactics, History Education and History Culture – Yearbook/Jahrbuch/Annales , 37 pp. 19-35. (2016) | 2016
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Charlotte Tupman
The English Historical Review | 2018
Angela Bartie; Linda Fleming; Mark Freeman; Tom Hulme; Alexander Neil Hutton