Finding gold (star students) in the data mine

Author(s):  
Teresa Piliouras ◽  
Pui Lam Yu ◽  
Yuhao Fei ◽  
Yongjia Zeng ◽  
Jingjing Chen ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
pp. 168-185
Author(s):  
G. Kurt Piehler
Keyword(s):  
War Dead ◽  

2019 ◽  
pp. 199-223
Author(s):  
William Brooks

Symbols like the service flag furthered community morale in the United States during World War I and evolved to engender memorial organizations like Gold Star Mothers. Music supported both, with three components of the industry—Tin Pan Alley, Kitchen Table publishing, and Song Sharks—differing in key respects: the participation of women composers and lyricists, the focus on mothers and loss, and the mix of ballads, waltz songs, and marches. As the war evolved, so did the responses, with the closing months and aftermath focusing increasingly on soldiers’ fatalities and the expression of grief and mourning. Postwar changes in style and dissemination marked the end of such collective expressions.


Author(s):  
David J. Bettez

This chapter covers the Spanish flu epidemic’s effects on the state; the Kentucky Council of Defense’s conference on state problems in March 1919; efforts to commemorate war participants in various ways (such as the University of Kentucky’s Memorial Hall and local memorials); and the experience of one Kentucky Gold Star Mother, Nola Miller Kinne Fogg, on her US government–sponsored pilgrimage to her son’s grave in France in the early 1930s. The chapter also draws some conclusions about Kentucky and the Great War, including how the state coalesced in support of the war despite political, economic, and social differences.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory T. Donovan
Keyword(s):  

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