“Stark naked, he was striding through the cordite stench with his head held high and his arms swinging. His body shone white in the brilliant light of the flare… He was singing ‘Home on the Range’ at the top of his lungs. The Worm That Never Dies had taken him.” (Farley Mowat, And No Birds Sang (Toronto: Mclelland and Stewart Ltd., 1979), 229.) As it was known at the time, “battle exhaustion” was an inseparable part of warfare on all fronts. As such, the Canadian army didn’t find itself immune to the effects of psychiatric losses, suffering casualties even before active campaigning had commenced. During the Italian campaign alone 5020 “Neuropsychiatric casualties” were reported, 16.9 percent of total battle casualties. (Terry Copp and Bill ...
Soldiers serving on the Western Front had few opportunities to question the situation in which they ...
Post-traumatic stress disorder is known as a common element of warfare. However, it has only gained ...
Psychological reactions to traumatic experiences of combat in World War 1 reached an epidemic scale ...
“Stark naked, he was striding through the cordite stench with his head held high and his arms swingi...
During the Second World War, controversy surrounded not the inevitability of psychiatric casualties ...
The conventional historiography of the treatment of war neurosis in Canada is limited and suggests t...
This article examines psychological breakdown, combat stress and military justice through the 1945 g...
Every country, especially one at war, is concerned with the mental strength of its military. During ...
SUMMARY: This paper examines factors leading to tile low rate of combat psychiatric casualties in th...
My intention with this paper is to reveal both how complicated the combat fatigue problem was and ho...
In this critical notice, I review and critique ‘Psychiatric Casualties’ (2021) by Mark C. Russell an...
The subject of traumatic war neurosis---today such an integral part of discussions of military servi...
This thesis explores the question of standardization in the First World War Canadian Army Medical Co...
A brief historical outline of wartime psychiatryFear and panic were with soldiers on the battlefield...
My project explores war weariness in the First World War, especially regarding the Canadian Corps. T...
Soldiers serving on the Western Front had few opportunities to question the situation in which they ...
Post-traumatic stress disorder is known as a common element of warfare. However, it has only gained ...
Psychological reactions to traumatic experiences of combat in World War 1 reached an epidemic scale ...
“Stark naked, he was striding through the cordite stench with his head held high and his arms swingi...
During the Second World War, controversy surrounded not the inevitability of psychiatric casualties ...
The conventional historiography of the treatment of war neurosis in Canada is limited and suggests t...
This article examines psychological breakdown, combat stress and military justice through the 1945 g...
Every country, especially one at war, is concerned with the mental strength of its military. During ...
SUMMARY: This paper examines factors leading to tile low rate of combat psychiatric casualties in th...
My intention with this paper is to reveal both how complicated the combat fatigue problem was and ho...
In this critical notice, I review and critique ‘Psychiatric Casualties’ (2021) by Mark C. Russell an...
The subject of traumatic war neurosis---today such an integral part of discussions of military servi...
This thesis explores the question of standardization in the First World War Canadian Army Medical Co...
A brief historical outline of wartime psychiatryFear and panic were with soldiers on the battlefield...
My project explores war weariness in the First World War, especially regarding the Canadian Corps. T...
Soldiers serving on the Western Front had few opportunities to question the situation in which they ...
Post-traumatic stress disorder is known as a common element of warfare. However, it has only gained ...
Psychological reactions to traumatic experiences of combat in World War 1 reached an epidemic scale ...