This paper focuses on the experience of British nurses, drawing on the personal accounts of K. Burke, W. Kenyon and S.M. Edwards, three British women posted on the Verdun front. Though acting at different levels of responsibility, these young volunteers went through converging experiences. Trying to put down in words this unspeakable reality, their eyewitness accounts echo one another. This paper will first address military and historical aspects as developed by Kenyon and Burke. It will then explore the social dimension of these accounts, reflecting on the significance of early 20th century social representations and wartime expectations. Propaganda, its distortion of motherhood and its instrumentalisation of femininity and masculinity wil...
Drawing on the photographic material preserved at the ICRC, this study examines women’s experience a...
Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and tw...
This is a preprint of a chapter in P. Grimshaw, K. Lindsey, S. Macintyre & K. Darian-Smith (Eds.), E...
Cet article s’articule autour des expériences de K. Burke, W. Kenyon et S. M. Edwards, trois infirmi...
Nurses played dual roles during the First World War. On the one hand, they functioned as witnesses t...
Drawing upon the primary accounts of three Great War nurses – Mildred Salt, Louisa Higginson and Dap...
The French Flag Nursing Corps (FFNC) was a small organisation of trained British, Irish and Commonwe...
Our memory and understanding of women's experiences at the Front during the First World War are ove...
The First World War was the first 'total war'. Its industrial weaponry damaged millions of men and d...
This article argues that the motivations for British women to volunteer for the First World War were...
In World War II, at a small RAF hospital in the south of England, plastic surgeon Archibald McIndoe ...
This thesis examines the ‘orphan story’ of British women in occupied France. It focuses in particula...
This article provides an analysis of a range literary texts and memoirs written by, and about, women...
Canadian nurses volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers during the Second World War...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
Drawing on the photographic material preserved at the ICRC, this study examines women’s experience a...
Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and tw...
This is a preprint of a chapter in P. Grimshaw, K. Lindsey, S. Macintyre & K. Darian-Smith (Eds.), E...
Cet article s’articule autour des expériences de K. Burke, W. Kenyon et S. M. Edwards, trois infirmi...
Nurses played dual roles during the First World War. On the one hand, they functioned as witnesses t...
Drawing upon the primary accounts of three Great War nurses – Mildred Salt, Louisa Higginson and Dap...
The French Flag Nursing Corps (FFNC) was a small organisation of trained British, Irish and Commonwe...
Our memory and understanding of women's experiences at the Front during the First World War are ove...
The First World War was the first 'total war'. Its industrial weaponry damaged millions of men and d...
This article argues that the motivations for British women to volunteer for the First World War were...
In World War II, at a small RAF hospital in the south of England, plastic surgeon Archibald McIndoe ...
This thesis examines the ‘orphan story’ of British women in occupied France. It focuses in particula...
This article provides an analysis of a range literary texts and memoirs written by, and about, women...
Canadian nurses volunteered for military service in overwhelming numbers during the Second World War...
In spite of the hardships of World War I, women volunteered as nurses out of patriotism and because ...
Drawing on the photographic material preserved at the ICRC, this study examines women’s experience a...
Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and tw...
This is a preprint of a chapter in P. Grimshaw, K. Lindsey, S. Macintyre & K. Darian-Smith (Eds.), E...