Brill’s Digital Library of World War I
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“We Stand on the Threshold of a New Age”: Alice Masaryková, the Czechoslovak Red Cross, and the Building of a New Europe
(8,699 words)
Women Readers of Henri Barbusse: The Evidence of Letters to the Author
(5,284 words)
Students
(1,543 words)
Tank
(1,187 words)
The Rhineland Horror Campaign and the Aftermath of War
(8,822 words)
The Disappearing Surplus: The Spinster in the Post-War Debate in Weimar Germany, 1918–1920
(9,212 words)
A Bitter-Sweet Victory: Feminisms in France (1918–1923)
(8,697 words)
Australia
(2,831 words)
Women’s Movement
(601 words)
Comradeship
(566 words)
Dehmel, Richard
(464 words)
‘Playing at being Soldiers’?: British Women and Military Uniform in the First World War
(10,127 words)
Bäumer, Gertrud
(749 words)
Volunteers, Auxiliaries, and Women’s Mobilization: The FirstWorld War and Beyond (1914–1939)
(18,792 words)
Eastern Command
(721 words)
Mata Hari
(314 words)
Soldiers’ Packages (Liebesgaben)
(469 words)
Brittain, Vera
(232 words)
Luxembourg
(1,322 words)
Gender and the Great War: Tsuda Umeko’s Role in Institutionalizing Women’s Education in Japan
(9,556 words)
“All That is Best of the Modern Woman”? Representations of Female Military Auxiliaries in British Popular Culture, 1914–1919
(11,249 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)
Red Cross
(1,371 words)
Field Hospitals (Germany)
(707 words)
“The Spirit of Woman-Power”: Representation of Women in World War I Posters
(14,021 words)
From “Free Love” to Married Love: Gender Politics, Marie Stopes, and Middlebrow Fiction by Women in the Early Nineteen Twenties
(8,637 words)
Russian Revolution
(1,052 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)
Best Boys and Aching Hearts: The Rhetoric of Romance as Social Control in Wartime Magazines for Young Women
(9,082 words)
Introduction: Women’s Movements and Female Activists in the Aftermath of War: International Perspectives 1918-1923
(10,482 words)
The Hun and the Home: Gender, Sexuality and Propaganda in First World War Europe
(7,466 words)
Zetkin, Clara
(470 words)
Monuments
(2,302 words)
Home Front
(853 words)
Japan
(2,146 words)
Psychiatry
(620 words)
Volunteers
(916 words)
Social Policy (Germany)
(1,215 words)
Barbarians
(892 words)
The Aftermaths of Defeat: The Fallen, the Catastrophe, and the Public Response of Women to the End of the First World War in Bulgaria
(8,095 words)
Aftermaths of War
(530 words)
Women Serving behind the Front
(530 words)
Raps across the Knuckles: The Extension of War Culture by Radical Nationalist Women Journalists in Post-1918 Germany
(8,310 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)
Japan and the Wider World in the Decade of the Great War: Introduction
(7,943 words)
Sabotage
(501 words)