This article applies an interpretive anthropological and phenomenological approach to the Great War in Britain, 1914–18, focusing on the cigarette as a cultural artefact and material commodity, and smoking as a cultural motif and social practice. The primary material featured includes personal correspondence from soldiers and civilians, newspaper articles, advertising and fictional literature. The fundamental task carried out by this study is the connection of developments in technology and distribution accelerated by the Great War, with smoking as a practice bound up with the social, cultural and material conditions in which those on the front found themselves
BACKGROUND - In the early 1900s, the industrialization of cigarette production rapidly created the f...
The girl or woman smoker is a twentieth-century phenomenon. In 1900, smoking was invariably associat...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
7 Abstract The theme of smoking and tobacco products in the First World War was so far only marginal...
The changing image and eventual triumph of the cigarette over other forms of tobacco consumption dur...
During the First World War, governments, civilians and soldiers alike prized smoking for its morale-...
The topic of smoking in the 20th century wasn't properly researched yet, especially in Czech Republi...
Despite its enormous social and medical significance, smoking has attracted little interest from his...
Despite the vast literature surrounding tobacco use, there is little work looking at the question of...
This dissertation explores the cultural practice of smoking and its connection to social relations f...
This thesis examines the fluctuating relationship between charity, material culture, and disabled ex...
This chapter is from the book Smoke: A Global History of Smoking, which examines the culture of smok...
This book considers the diversity of the experiences and legacies of the First World War, looking at...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
Britain and World War One throws attention on the civilians who fought the war on the Home Front. Ha...
BACKGROUND - In the early 1900s, the industrialization of cigarette production rapidly created the f...
The girl or woman smoker is a twentieth-century phenomenon. In 1900, smoking was invariably associat...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...
7 Abstract The theme of smoking and tobacco products in the First World War was so far only marginal...
The changing image and eventual triumph of the cigarette over other forms of tobacco consumption dur...
During the First World War, governments, civilians and soldiers alike prized smoking for its morale-...
The topic of smoking in the 20th century wasn't properly researched yet, especially in Czech Republi...
Despite its enormous social and medical significance, smoking has attracted little interest from his...
Despite the vast literature surrounding tobacco use, there is little work looking at the question of...
This dissertation explores the cultural practice of smoking and its connection to social relations f...
This thesis examines the fluctuating relationship between charity, material culture, and disabled ex...
This chapter is from the book Smoke: A Global History of Smoking, which examines the culture of smok...
This book considers the diversity of the experiences and legacies of the First World War, looking at...
This article examines how the memory of the First World War (1914–1918) across Britain has been stru...
Britain and World War One throws attention on the civilians who fought the war on the Home Front. Ha...
BACKGROUND - In the early 1900s, the industrialization of cigarette production rapidly created the f...
The girl or woman smoker is a twentieth-century phenomenon. In 1900, smoking was invariably associat...
Although the photographic representation of wars was not employed uniquely and primarily for the Fir...