Brill’s Digital Library of World War I
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The Disappearing Surplus: The Spinster in the Post-War Debate in Weimar Germany, 1918–1920
(9,212 words)
‘Playing at being Soldiers’?: British Women and Military Uniform in the First World War
(10,127 words)
Ardour and Anxiety: Politics and Literature in the Indian Homefront
(10,932 words)
Proud Fighters, Blind Men: World War Experiences of Combatants from the Arab East
(11,533 words)
Militarizing the Disabled: Medicine, Industry, and “Total Mobilization” in World War I Germany
(8,716 words)
Volunteers, Auxiliaries, and Women’s Mobilization: The FirstWorld War and Beyond (1914–1939)
(18,792 words)
Losing Manliness: Bohemian Workers and the Experience of the Home Front
(8,269 words)
Letters From Captivity: The First World War Correspondence of the German Prisoners of War in the United Kingdom
(10,203 words)
Australian Prisoners of the Turks: Negotiating Culture Clash in Captivity
(8,635 words)
Toys, Games and Juvenile Literature in Germany and Britain During the First World War. A Comparison
(10,962 words)
Practical Memory: Organized Veterans and the Politics of Commemoration
(8,659 words)
The Women’s Suffrage Campaign in Italy in 1919 and Voce Nuova (“New Voice”): Corporatism, Nationalism and the Struggle for Political Rights
(8,310 words)
“The Spirit of Woman-Power”: Representation of Women in World War I Posters
(14,021 words)
Best Boys and Aching Hearts: The Rhetoric of Romance as Social Control in Wartime Magazines for Young Women
(9,082 words)
Soldiers, Members of Parliament, Social Activists: The Polish Women’s Movement after World War I
(8,489 words)
‘Tailoring in the Trenches’: The Making of First World War British Army Uniform
(9,853 words)
Tears in the Trenches: A History of Emotions and the Experience of War
(109 words)
‘Gladder to be Going Out Than Afraid’: Shellshock and Heroic Masculinity in Britain, 1914–1919
(105 words)
‘Humans Are Cheap and the Bread is Dear.’ Republican Portrayals of the War Experience in Weimar Germany
(12,271 words)
Raps across the Knuckles: The Extension of War Culture by Radical Nationalist Women Journalists in Post-1918 Germany
(8,310 words)
