In the preface to the 1941 edition to his 1908 novel, The War in the Air, H. G. Wells wrote: ‘I told you so. You damned fools’. The books discussed here illustrate how, in the few intervening decades, air war moved from a fearful vision into reality, and detail the varied experiences and consequences of the aerial bombardment of cities and civilians. The histories of air power and the aerial bombardment of cities have centred on the Second World War, moving from the humanising endurance of Londoners during the Blitz to the entirely dehumanised horror of the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The texts reviewed here extend the histories of air war and highlight the city and the home as a target for bombing while remaining the place where...
Tens of thousands of Italian civilians perished in the Allied bombing raids of World War II. More of...
This paper presents an overview of Second World War bomb damage to British towns and cities, and a s...
(First Paragraph) Was fall 1940 truly Britain\u27s finest hour, as Winston Churchill memorably sug...
The Blitz Companion offers a unique overview of a century of aerial warfare, its impact on cities an...
This article considers how the imagination and expectation of future air raids impacted upon the per...
Review of Bombing the City: Civilian Accounts of the Air War in Britain and Japan, 1939-1945 by Aa...
During World War I, technological advances in air power expanded the field of battle beyond the fron...
Both Britain and Germany participated in aerial bombing initiatives in the Second World War. Germany...
In the bombing of urban settlements, the main impacts have been on resident civilians, living space ...
In Britain, popular memory of the Blitz celebrates civilian resistance to the German bombing of Lond...
This chapter argues that aerial theatre, in the form of annual air displays at Hendon and on Empire ...
During the First World War, several writers began to argue that the main strategic risk to Britain w...
Few historical images are more powerful than those of wartime London. Having survived a constant bar...
Reviews of: Anne Fuchs, After the Dresden Bombing: Pathways of Memory, 1945 to the Present; Tony Joe...
Frank Ledwidge, Aerial Warfare: The Battle for the Skies. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. 184...
Tens of thousands of Italian civilians perished in the Allied bombing raids of World War II. More of...
This paper presents an overview of Second World War bomb damage to British towns and cities, and a s...
(First Paragraph) Was fall 1940 truly Britain\u27s finest hour, as Winston Churchill memorably sug...
The Blitz Companion offers a unique overview of a century of aerial warfare, its impact on cities an...
This article considers how the imagination and expectation of future air raids impacted upon the per...
Review of Bombing the City: Civilian Accounts of the Air War in Britain and Japan, 1939-1945 by Aa...
During World War I, technological advances in air power expanded the field of battle beyond the fron...
Both Britain and Germany participated in aerial bombing initiatives in the Second World War. Germany...
In the bombing of urban settlements, the main impacts have been on resident civilians, living space ...
In Britain, popular memory of the Blitz celebrates civilian resistance to the German bombing of Lond...
This chapter argues that aerial theatre, in the form of annual air displays at Hendon and on Empire ...
During the First World War, several writers began to argue that the main strategic risk to Britain w...
Few historical images are more powerful than those of wartime London. Having survived a constant bar...
Reviews of: Anne Fuchs, After the Dresden Bombing: Pathways of Memory, 1945 to the Present; Tony Joe...
Frank Ledwidge, Aerial Warfare: The Battle for the Skies. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018. 184...
Tens of thousands of Italian civilians perished in the Allied bombing raids of World War II. More of...
This paper presents an overview of Second World War bomb damage to British towns and cities, and a s...
(First Paragraph) Was fall 1940 truly Britain\u27s finest hour, as Winston Churchill memorably sug...