Brill’s Digital Library of World War I
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Counting Unrest: Physical Manifestations of Unrest and Their Relationship to Admiralty Perception
(9,455 words)
The Science Room as an Archive: Taisho Japan and WWI
(8,904 words)
Introduction: Popular Culture and the First World War
(7,463 words)
Who Provided Care for Wounded and Disabled Soldiers? Conceptualizing State-Civil Society Relationship in First World War Austria
(11,870 words)
Leave and Schizophrenia: Permissionnaires in Paris During the First World War
(102 words)
Encountering the ‘Enemy’: Prisoner of War Transport and the Development of War Cultures in 1914
(11,480 words)
Women Readers of Henri Barbusse: The Evidence of Letters to the Author
(5,284 words)
La Dame Blanche: Gender and Espionage in Occupied Belgium
(93 words)
The First World War According to the Memories of ‘Commoners’ in the Bilād al-Shām
(5,116 words)
Protest and Disability: A New Look at African American Soldiers during the First World War
(10,875 words)
‘War Profiteers’ and ‘War Profiters’: Representing Economic Gain in France during the First World War
(13,308 words)
“German Women Help to Win!” Women and the German Military in the Age of World Wars
(11,862 words)
The First World War in Contemporary British Popular Culture
(11,010 words)
The Corrosiveness of Comparison: Reverberations of Indian Wartime Experiences in German Prison Camps (1915–1919)
(16,260 words)
War Comes to the Fields: Sacrifice, Localism and Ploughing Up the English Countryside in 1917
(7,308 words)
German Propaganda and Prisoners-of-War during World War I
(10,248 words)
‘Weary Waiting is Hard Indeed’: The Grand Fleet after Jutland
(9,716 words)
Propaganda, Imperial Subjecthood and National Identity in Jamaica during the First World War
(9,614 words)
War on Stage. Home Front Entertainment in European Metropolises 1914–1918
(6,871 words)
Sovereignty and Imperial Hygiene: Japan and the 1919 Cholera Epidemic in East Asia
(9,031 words)