Brill’s Digital Library of World War I
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Between Veiling and Unveiling: Modern Camouflage and the City as a Theater of War
(110 words)
A Different Kind of Home Front: War, Gender and Propaganda in Warsaw, 1914–1918
(10,415 words)
War Enacted: Popular Theater and Collective Identities in Berlin, 1914–1918
(92 words)
‘Playing at being Soldiers’?: British Women and Military Uniform in the First World War
(10,127 words)
“Wartime Hysterics”?: Alcohol, Women and the Politics of Wartime Social Purity in England
(10,502 words)
New Jerusalems: Sacrifice and Redemption in the War Experiences of English and German Military Chaplains
(12,828 words)
Ardour and Anxiety: Politics and Literature in the Indian Homefront
(10,932 words)
Information, Censorship or Propaganda? The Illustrated French Press in the First World War
(10,282 words)
A Uniform of Whiteness: Racisms in the German Officer Corps, 1900–1918
(104 words)
The Great War between Degeneration and Regeneration
(95 words)
‘If It Had Happened Otherwise’—First World War Exceptionalism in Counterfactual History
(10,478 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)
Forging The Industrial Home Front: Iron-Nail Memorials in the Ruhr
(92 words)
Losing Manliness: Bohemian Workers and the Experience of the Home Front
(8,269 words)
Defending the Heimat: The Germans in South-West Africa and East Africa During the First World War
(12,890 words)
‘The Germans Have Landed!’: Invasion Fears in the South-East of England, August to December 1914
(9,095 words)
“Fight the Huns with Food”: Mobilizing Canadian Civilians for the Food War Effort during the Great War, 1914–1918
(9,738 words)
Letters From Captivity: The First World War Correspondence of the German Prisoners of War in the United Kingdom
(10,203 words)
The Propinquity of Place: Home, Landscape and Soldier Poets of the First World War
(10,639 words)