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[PDF] Top 20 Panic over the pub : drink and the First World War

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Panic over the pub : drink and the First World War

Panic over the pub : drink and the First World War

... In the matter of publicity, the advocates of intolerant teetotalism enjoy a marked advantage over the trade. Scarcely an utterance is made, even by the veriest nonentity, without it finding a prominent position in ... See full document

329

The rhetoric of disfigurement in First World War Britain

The rhetoric of disfigurement in First World War Britain

... the war, visitors to the Queen ’ s Hospital at Sidcup would be able to see Henry Tonks ’ remarkable life drawings of patients before and after surgical ...the war veteran was not explored as a site of shame ... See full document

22

A Composer Goes to War: E. J. Moeran and the First World War

A Composer Goes to War: E. J. Moeran and the First World War

... Performing Arts Library of the University of Melbourne as part of the E. J. Moeran Collection, AUS- Mlpml, 780.92 Moe VCA MOE 12, and comprises settings of the following poems: Westward, on the high-hilled plains, When I ... See full document

27

First World War Digital Resources

First World War Digital Resources

... divided into broad categories (remembrance, propaganda, aerial warfare, etc.) and searchable by the resource type. Such an approach is welcome, allowing for a reasonable degree of filtering to take place (necessary as a ... See full document

5

Introduction: Untold Legacies of the First World War

Introduction: Untold Legacies of the First World War

... perspective. The members of the research team have been working not only alongside other university academics but equally alongside museum professionals, community researchers and cultural practitioners. They have ... See full document

6

Echoes of the Great War: The recordings of African prisoners in the First World War

Echoes of the Great War: The recordings of African prisoners in the First World War

... However, in at least one case the profitable presenting of ‘exotic people’ to the curious German public produced a cautiously formulated criticism from the side of ‘the object’. The articulations of Somali-speaker ... See full document

17

Army officers, historians and journalists: the emergence, expansion and diversification of British military history, 1854 1914

Army officers, historians and journalists: the emergence, expansion and diversification of British military history, 1854 1914

... The material used in the teaching of Military History at the army’s academies has remained virtually unused by historians; this is a reflection, itself, of the lack of scholarly interest in the subject. 95 This material ... See full document

429

First World War

First World War

... First, the government exempted many shipyard workers from the draft and gave others a “deferred” classification, delaying their participation in the draft. Second, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce joined in a public ... See full document

33

Conrad and the First World War

Conrad and the First World War

... the war by C.F.G. Masterman, head of the British War Propaganda Bureau, to a meeting of writers at Wellington House in ...ageing war propagandists such as Hardy, Kipling, and Wells, initiated the ... See full document

5

The French Army and the First World War

The French Army and the First World War

... Foch, over the casualties sustained in repelling the German Spring Offensives is demonstration enough of the extent of French military involvement ...of war-weariness as neither Pétain’s or Foch’s ... See full document

5

Irish Rugby and the First World War

Irish Rugby and the First World War

... The collective sacrifice made by rugby union was one of the most popular contemporary rhetorical links made in Britain between sport and the First World War. Tony Collins has pointed out that in an ... See full document

17

London in the First World War: questions of legacy

London in the First World War: questions of legacy

... the war saw the beginning of the demise of the privately-owned common lodging house or ‘doss-house’ in London, numbers in the County falling from 308 in 1914 to 211 in ...turned over to Belgian refugees and ... See full document

20

Philanthropy in Britain during the First World War

Philanthropy in Britain during the First World War

... Children even contributed to the production of explosives. It was discovered that the humble horse chestnut could be used as an alternative to acetone (an essential element in the manufacture of cordite) and an ... See full document

16

The British Centennial Commemoration of the First World War

The British Centennial Commemoration of the First World War

... goes over the top to certain death to be replaced by a field of poppies – the traditional symbol of British remembrance of the fallen – was voted in 2000 as among the top ten television moments of all time ... See full document

14

Psychological Trauma and the Legacies of the First World War

Psychological Trauma and the Legacies of the First World War

... Notwithstanding my concerns about the uncritical enlargement of the concept of trauma by historians, Psychological Trauma is nevertheless host to some methodologically-innovative research; indeed, I have to confess that ... See full document

6

PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR

PSYCHOLOGICAL OPERATIONS AFTER THE SECOND WORLD WAR

... Psychological operations played a key role in the destruction of enemy morale and contributed to the large scale surrender and desertion of Iraqi soldiers. According to statements by an Iraqi division commander, PSYOP ... See full document

26

The Empire at war: British and Indian perceptions of empire in the First World War

The Empire at war: British and Indian perceptions of empire in the First World War

... be broken down into certain identifiable aspects of broader British perceptions of the Indian Army: Indian notions of honour or izzat; the role of the Indians in the army; Indian brave[r] ... See full document

65

The Empire at war: British and Indian perceptions of empire in the First World War

The Empire at war: British and Indian perceptions of empire in the First World War

... ‘X’ over hunting: ‘Discussing our week end plans with Jemadar Dost Mahomed I remarked that we would have to find a few score brace of really slow moving birds if we were ever to sting X for the ... See full document

65

Psychological Effects of Atomic Bombing   L54 134 pdf

Psychological Effects of Atomic Bombing L54 134 pdf

... Although the world has been almost continuously at war during this tirne~ it is a significant and somewhat astonishing fact that there have been few instances of panic directly connected[r] ... See full document

19

Overlooked : Tasmanian Aborigines in the First World War

Overlooked : Tasmanian Aborigines in the First World War

... The Bass Strait sealing industry began in 1798 when Captain Charles Bishop and his crew obtained 9,000 skins at Kent Bay on Cape Barren Island. The number of seal taken over the next eight years all but decimated ... See full document

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