TY - BOOK AU - Pickles,Katie TI - Transnational outrage: the death and commemoration of Edith Cavell SN - 140398607X AV - D625 .P53 2007 U1 - 940.405 22 PY - 2007/// CY - Basingstoke PB - Palgrave Macmillan KW - Cavell, Edith, KW - World War, 1914-1918 KW - Atrocities KW - Public opinion N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; 1; Pathway to death : arrest and trial --; 2; Gendered execution : dying like a woman --; 3; Thrills of horror and waves of outrage : diffusing propaganda --; 4; Who was this heroine? : representation and reality --; 5; The geography of stone : placing traditional monuments --; 6; Homes and hospitals : locating medical memorials --; 7; The legacy of care : women helping women --; 8; Cultural imperialism and naming : embodied spirits and memory in the landscape N2 - "On 12 October 1915 German occupying forces in Belgium executed 49-year-old British matron Edith Cavell for 'escorting troops to the enemy'. Her death was portrayed by the Allied cause as a major atrocity, stories of her fate flashed around the world and Cavell became a famous heroine of the Great War. Transnational Outrage reinterprets versions of Cavell's arrest, trial and execution through the twentieth century. Was Cavell innocent or guilty? Were the Germans wrong to kill a woman? And what was the significance of her death more generally for women's place in war and society?" "Along with traditional memorials, extensive forms of worldwide commemoration for Cavell included a mountain, a bridge, nurses' residences, poetry, films and music. Streets, people and animals were named after her. Transnational Outrage maps memorials in the landscape to reveal the imposition of Britishness and how a former 'British world' was constructed across the metropolitan and colonial divides. It argues that the importance of Allied commemoration (in Europe and the United States) challenges insular understandings of a British imperial past."--BOOK JACKET ER -