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[PDF] Top 20 Representations of combat : the British war correspondents and the First World War

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Representations of combat : the British war correspondents and the First World War

Representations of combat : the British war correspondents and the First World War

... Since the Napoleonic and Crimean wars Britain had not needed large regular or conscript armies, relying instead on the power of the Royal Navy and a small professional force of regular s[r] ... See full document

373

Listening in combat - surveillance technologies beyond the visual in the First World War

Listening in combat - surveillance technologies beyond the visual in the First World War

... the First World War in the development of the Warfare State since the use of aural telecommunication in direct combat had begun with the Russo-Japanese war of ...the world by ... See full document

25

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

... The first was suffering from pneumonia and wrote that the government was looking after him well, and that: ‘it is our first duty to show our loyal gratitude to ...of war in very different ...escape ... See full document

65

Combat Resilience in the First World War – a Historiographical Review

Combat Resilience in the First World War – a Historiographical Review

... to British soldiers because they were either short of money or they craved ...the war and even more bizarre is that most locals were glad to see them ... See full document

7

British Diplomacy on Albania during the First World War

British Diplomacy on Albania during the First World War

... Tirana, according to the information that Mr. Greig received, was occupied by Serbian forces on 8 June 1915. Serbian losses during this expedition had reached 80 killed and about 150 wounded (TNA: FO 371/2258, p 116). ... See full document

16

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

Army chaplains in the First World War

Army chaplains in the First World War

... The Last Crusade: The Church Marrin, England of First North Carolina: Duke in World War.. 179-182 Parliamentary Clerk the Recruiting Mr.[r] ... See full document

291

Archipelagic poetry of the First World War

Archipelagic poetry of the First World War

... the British poetic response to war, there remained an alternative in the Celtic literary ideal which had been encouraged in the nineteenth century by the cultural theories of Matthew Arnold and Ernest Renan ... See full document

16

Prisoners of war and civilian internees captured by
British and Dominion forces from the German colonies
during the First World War

Prisoners of war and civilian internees captured by British and Dominion forces from the German colonies during the First World War

... the British as ...the British Foreign Office that an American named Frank Macdonald was in the middle of doing a deal to sell the original negatives to the ...on war precautions that had been issued ... See full document

230

Spies in Uniform: British Military and Naval Intelligence on the Eve of the First World War

Spies in Uniform: British Military and Naval Intelligence on the Eve of the First World War

... of British policy towards Germany before 1914 largely ignores the very events leading up to the War and the role of these intelligence sources within it ... See full document

5

Conrad and the First World War

Conrad and the First World War

... Conrad’s war-time ...his first command, the sense of stasis before the storm at sea corresponded to the anticipation of battle: ‘In the tension of silence I was suffering from it seemed to me that the ... See full document

5

Men of Science: The British Association, Masculinity and the First World War

Men of Science: The British Association, Masculinity and the First World War

... after war had been ...the British press when the announcement was ...the British Association has been a British institution in constitution and ...at war with ... See full document

23

The French Army and the First World War

The French Army and the First World War

... the First World War, common perceptions of France’s military experience between 1914 and 1918 have tended to be reduced to mere flashpoints of ...for British readers these are likely to have ... See full document

5

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

... his war was (mostly) exceptionally easy, although he did spend a few weeks serving as an officer on the Western Front in France, and the glimpses of Moeran at the front line that are provided by the War ... See full document

27

Tasmania and the First World War : a study of the effects of the First World War on Tasmanian society and politics, 1914 1919

Tasmania and the First World War : a study of the effects of the First World War on Tasmanian society and politics, 1914 1919

... By late 1915 the Labor movement in Tasmania was divided to such an extent that there were serious proposals to oppose Labor candidates with union nominees in the 1916 State election... C[r] ... See full document

355

A battle to win : an analysis of combat effectiveness through the Second World War experience of the 21st (Auckland) Battalion : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Defence and Strategic S

A battle to win : an analysis of combat effectiveness through the Second World War experience of the 21st (Auckland) Battalion : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Defence and Strategic Studies at Massey University, New Zealand

... General Thomas Blamey, commander of the ANZAC Corps in Greece, decided that a brigade sized force was required to defend the Pinios Gorge area in order to prevent the Germans reaching Larisa. 16 (Australian) Brigade was ... See full document

451

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

... in the camps, and the visits of photographers and artists led to the accumulation of a massive amount of written and visual documents, published and unpublished. The interlacing of propaganda material, racial studies and ... See full document

17

Women's poetry of the First World War

Women's poetry of the First World War

... Prominent examples are John Johnston's English Poetry of the First World War Princeton, Princeton University Press 1964; Bernard Bergonzi's Heroes' Twilight London, Constable 1965; Jon S[r] ... See full document

300

First World War Digital Resources

First World War Digital Resources

... http://www.firstworldwarstudies.org/ [16] provides a location for those with a more recognisably academic approach to the war. Created in 2001 by Jenny Macleod and Pierre Purseigle, the society is an international ... See full document

5

Women War Correspondents in 2013

Women War Correspondents in 2013

... Women who choose to work as war reporters still have to justify them- selves. Christina Lamb, the award-winning Sunday Times journalist and author, who interviewed General Pinochet the day after she was released ... See full document

10

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