Pre-print version deposited following SHERPA guidelines. This is an electronic version of an article published in Essays in Criticism Vol.59(2), 2009
While many scholars of World War I poetry have identified aspects of soldier poets’ work that embody...
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
This article discusses the development of the Livens Large Gallery Flame Projector, a massive Britis...
On February 18, 1919, Second Lieutenant Fritz Draper Hurd supervised recreational activities for the...
William, an Englishman is a novel written in a tent near the French front by a ‘non-combatant’: the ...
There is little doubt that Fritz Haber (1868–1934) was the driving force behind the centrally direct...
The battle of the Somme, which began on July 1, 1916, was the most brutal encounter of World War I, ...
John Schumann's song 'I was only Nineteen' contains the line 'The Anzac Legend didn't mention Mud,' ...
This article explores the depiction of wounded soldiers in Samuel Beckett’s novel Mercier and Camier...
During the First World War, British officers, primarily upper class, struggled to adapt to trauma wi...
While English-speaking historians know in detail about almost every event on the BEF’s front, the sa...
George Campbell Hay (1915-84) saw military service in the Second World War in North Africa. This boo...
Between 1914 and 1918, the British Expeditionary Force fighting in France and Flanders sustained 2.7...
The British Infantryman of the First World War hated Staff Officers more than any other supporting o...
In most countries at war in 1914-1918, a phenomenon quickly appeared: soldier literature. Depending ...
While many scholars of World War I poetry have identified aspects of soldier poets’ work that embody...
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
This article discusses the development of the Livens Large Gallery Flame Projector, a massive Britis...
On February 18, 1919, Second Lieutenant Fritz Draper Hurd supervised recreational activities for the...
William, an Englishman is a novel written in a tent near the French front by a ‘non-combatant’: the ...
There is little doubt that Fritz Haber (1868–1934) was the driving force behind the centrally direct...
The battle of the Somme, which began on July 1, 1916, was the most brutal encounter of World War I, ...
John Schumann's song 'I was only Nineteen' contains the line 'The Anzac Legend didn't mention Mud,' ...
This article explores the depiction of wounded soldiers in Samuel Beckett’s novel Mercier and Camier...
During the First World War, British officers, primarily upper class, struggled to adapt to trauma wi...
While English-speaking historians know in detail about almost every event on the BEF’s front, the sa...
George Campbell Hay (1915-84) saw military service in the Second World War in North Africa. This boo...
Between 1914 and 1918, the British Expeditionary Force fighting in France and Flanders sustained 2.7...
The British Infantryman of the First World War hated Staff Officers more than any other supporting o...
In most countries at war in 1914-1918, a phenomenon quickly appeared: soldier literature. Depending ...
While many scholars of World War I poetry have identified aspects of soldier poets’ work that embody...
The fourth of August 1914 was a day of jubilation throughout Britain. German armies, numbering in th...
This article discusses the development of the Livens Large Gallery Flame Projector, a massive Britis...