Ben Brooker reviews 'Reflections on Gallipoli'
It is, of course, one hundred years since almost 9,000 Australians died on a small Turkish peninsula during a campaign that, despite its localised failure as a military operation and futility in influencing the overall course of the war, has been unalterably woven into the fabric of our national mythos. Commemorative presentations are frequent. Orchestras, television producers, and performing arts companies across the country rally to a cause that has, over the decades, moved in and out of the public consciousness, its meaning ceaselessly contested.
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