HIGHLIGHTS
- What: Through their detailed descriptions of emotional practices, newspaper coverage of public commemorations on Armistice Day 1919 and the two minutes` silence challenged and (re-)negotiated the emotional regime of the stiff upper lip and its prohibition on male weeping in public.
- Who: Karsten Lichau from the Center for the History of Emotions, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin, Germany have published the article: ``The streaming eyes of all the many men``: Revisiting male weeping in British commemoration of the First World War, in the Journal: (JOURNAL) of November/11,/1919
SUMMARY . . .

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