Brill’s Digital Library of World War I
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How a Pro-German Minority Influenced Dutch Intellectual Debate During the Great War
(97 words)
The Old Front Line: Returning to the Battlefields in the Writings of Ex-Servicemen
(8,979 words)
Between Veiling and Unveiling: Modern Camouflage and the City as a Theater of War
(110 words)
An American Geographer between Science and Diplomacy: The Mission of Douglas W. Johnson in Europe, May–November 1918
(12,296 words)
War between Allies: Polish and Ukrainian Intellectuals 1914–1923
(8,422 words)
The Memory Landscape of the South-Western Front: Cultural Legacy, Promotion of Tourism, or European Heritage?
(15,094 words)
Diverse Constructions: Feminist and Conservative Women’s Movements and Their Contribution to the (Re-)Construction of Gender Relations in Hungary after the First World War
(8,854 words)
New Writers, New Literary Genres (1914–1918): The Contribution of Historical Comparatism (France, Germany)
(9,272 words)
Introduction: Perspectives in First World War Studies
(93 words)
The Great War and Modern Scholarship: Academic Responses to War in Paris and London
(11,490 words)
War Neurosis and Viennese Psychiatry in World War One
(93 words)
The First World War and German Memory
(13,798 words)
Marc Sangnier’s War, 1914–1919: Portrait of a Soldier, Catholic and Social Activist
(10,495 words)
Who Represents Hungarian Women? The Demise of the Liberal Bourgeois Women’s Rights Movement and the Rise of the Right-Wing Women’s Movement in the Aftermath of World War I
(8,193 words)
After the Vote was Won. The Fate of the Women’s Suffrage Movement in Russia After the October Revolution: Individuals, Ideas and Deeds
(7,787 words)
Other Fronts, Other Diseases? Comparisons of Front-specific Practices in Medical Treatment
(10,111 words)
