War Time(Routledge Studies in First World War History) H 234 p. 18
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Contents Foreword by John Horne List of Contributors Acknowledgements Introduction Louis Halewood, Adam Luptak and Hanna Smyth Section I: Speed, Pacing, & Suspension No Time To Waste: How German military authorities attempted to speed up the recovery of soldiers in home front hospitals, 1914-1918. Alina Enzensberger Fast Therapy and Fast Recovery: The Role of Time for the Italian Neuropsychiatric Service in the War Zones. Anna Grillini A Stitch in Time: Inefficiency and the Appeal of Patriotic Work in Australia and Canada. Steve Marti Slow Going: Wartime Affect and Small Press Modernism. Cedric Van Dijck Section II: Reorientation & Memory "It is at night-time that we notice most of the changes in our life caused by the war": War-time, Zeppelins and Children’s Experience of the Great War in London. Assaf Mond Time, Space, and Death: Germany’s Living and Lost Aviators of the First World War. Robert William Rennie The Photo Albums of the First World War: Composing and Practicing the Images of the Time of Destruction. Erica Grossi Section III: Relationship Between Past, Present, & Future Brothers – and Sons – in Arms: First World War Memory, the Life Cycle, and Generational Shifts during the Second World War. Ashley Garber Between Passatism and Futurism: The Rites of Consecration to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in a Transnational Perspective (1914-1919). Sante Lesti Hoping for Victorious Peace: Morale and the Future on the Western Front, 1914-1918. Alexander C. Mayhew Index