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Articles de revues sur le sujet "World War 1914-1918 - Military nursing"

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Watkins, PeterJ, et Valerie J. Watkins. « Alice Welford (1887–1918), a nurse in World War I : The impact of kindness and compassion ». Journal of Medical Biography 25, no 1 (9 juillet 2016) : 56–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967772015575881.

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The contribution of nurses to the morale of wounded and dying young men during World War 1 was immense. Alice Welford came from the small North Yorkshire village of Crathorne, joined the Queen Alexandra Imperial Military Nursing Service in 1915 and spent the following two and one half years in nursing casualties from some of the fiercest battles of the war including Gallipoli and Salonika. She kept an autograph book inscribed by wounded and dying soldiers, with poignant verses and humorous drawings showing love, wit and tragedy. Despite the dreadful conditions, kindness and compassion brought them comfort and raised their morale – a critical message for today, and Alice’s gift to us from World War I.
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Likhvar, V. V. « International legal regulation of the use of reprisals as a form of political responsibility of states ». Analytical and Comparative Jurisprudence, no 1 (20 mars 2024) : 703–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.24144/2788-6018.2024.01.124.

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The article attempts to determine the principles of international legal regulation of the use of reprisals as a form of political responsibility in international law, since reprisals are illegal actions committed in response to previous illegal actions of the state, proportional to the initial offense. International law has changed the application of the doctrine of retaliation to avoid an upward spiral of violence where one side retaliates against the illegal actions of another, causing ever more violent bloodshed, while the laws of war are meant to regulate and limit such harm. Theoretical provisions regarding the international legal regulation of the use of reprisals as one of the forms of political responsibility according to international law are analyzed. In order for reprisals against permitted categories of persons and objects not to be illegal, five conditions must be met. Most of these conditions are laid down in military instructions and confirmed by official statements. The following conditions: the purpose of reprisal (can be used only in response to a previous serious violation of international law and only to induce the adversary to comply with the law); last resort (can only be used as a last resort when there are no other legal measures), proportionality (measures must be proportionate to the violation it aims to stop), decision at the highest level of government (the decision must be taken at the highest level of government), termination (must be terminated as soon as the adversary begins to enforce the law). The occurrence of reprisals in real cases is analyzed - Naulilaa Incident (When Portugal was neutral, in October 1914, a German group entered the Portuguese-African territories from German South­West Africa) and «Israel against Palestine» (After the Second World War the Jews wanted their own country. They were given a large part of Palestine, which they considered their traditional home, but the Arabs did not accept the new country. In 1948, both sides went to war); the use of reprisals in today's world is analyzed.
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Simonenko, E. S. « Naval Policy of Canada during First World War (1914—1918) ». Nauchnyi dialog 11, no 8 (30 octobre 2022) : 436–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2022-11-8-436-452.

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The activities of the Navy Ministry of Canada during the First World War are analyzed in the article. For the first time in Russian historiography, the main directions of Canada’s maritime policy are formulated within the framework of the government’s military course during the First World War. The sources for the study were the debates of the House of Commons of the Canadian Parliament, publications in the Canadian press, the military series of historical and statistical collections and journalism of those years. The state of Canadian naval bases and ports, as well as the features of the development of the shipbuilding industry of the dominion during the war years is characterized. It is proved that during the war years, Canada’s maritime policy was determined by the British Admiralty and developed in two directions: imperial and national. The development of the imperial direction of maritime policy was carried out in the interests of Great Britain. It provided for the recruitment of Canadian volunteers for service in the Royal Navy and the development of a shipbuilding industry for the needs of the British Navy. The national direction of maritime policy provided for the protection of Canadian coasts and territorial waters, for which the infrastructure of Canadian naval bases and ports was actively used. To perform patrol and escort functions, state and private vessels were involved not only for military, but also for civilian purposes.
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Janev, Vladimir. « The residence of the foreign medical experts in Macedonia during the World War I (1914-1918) ». Scientific knowledge - autonomy, dependence, resistance 29, no 2 (30 mai 2020) : 65–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.37708/bf.swu.v29i2.5.

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During the World War I, several different armies were waging war at the territory of Macedonia. Throughout their stay, besides the conduct of military operations, they also had a military medical services as a part of their armies. It is interesting to note that professional military notes were written by military doctors, which were published in their countries after the World War I. Among the foreign medical experts was Isabel Galloway Emslie Hutton. She was a Scottish medical doctor who specialized in mental health and social work.
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Pirnat, Jani. « Animals in the Years 1914–1918 as Part of War Propaganda ». Instinct, Vol. 4, no. 1 (2019) : 71–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.47659/m6.071.art.

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The article focuses on examples of also using animals for war propaganda. Photography served to justify animal drafting, to keep up the military morale, and to show how cruel the enemy was. The animal ‘heroes’ of the newspapers– horses, dogs and pigeons – illustrate the attitude of humankind toward animalkind in the first industrial and technological war that showed the vulnerability and the nonsense of using animals on the fronts. Keywords: animals in war, First World War, photography, propaganda images of animals, representation of animals, surveillance
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König, Ralf Martin. « Zwischen Ausbeutung, Förderung und Reglementierung : Textile Kriegsheimarbeit in Deutschland 1914 bis 1918 ». Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte / Economic History Yearbook 58, no 2 (27 novembre 2017) : 537–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jbwg-2017-0020.

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Abstract This essay intends to provide an introduction into an interesting aspect of the German war economy of the First World War not previously examined in detail: home-based outwork for the production of military supplies. In particular, this type of home-based outwork enjoyed great popularity amongst women with no previous experience of this form of work, such as soldiers’ wives and war widows. They were supported by various charitable welfare societies and women’s organizations which campaigned for public welfare during the war. Their efforts included the establishment of sewing rooms in which military home-based outwork was provided as emergency work. Orders were supplied by the military procurement bodies of the German Reich. Although many potential workers were thus withheld from the armaments industry, the development was not seen as a problem by the military administration. However, it did react critically to the many cases in which particularly female home workers were duped by firms when picking up their work. Especially in the area around Berlin, the military authorities intervened vigorously to enforce standard wages for the home workers sewing military uniforms. Nevertheless, the year 1916 marks a turning point: This benevolent stance on home-based outwork changed under the pressure of new employment priorities. New contract regulations made military home-based outwork difficult for unskilled male and female workers to access. These were in theory then available to work in the armaments industry and in agriculture, areas both struggling to meet labour demands. Moreover, the changes led to an organizational separation between sandbag sewing and other home-based outwork involved in producing textiles for the military. In the case of sandbag sewing, a separate war committee was responsible for the planned distribution of sandbag orders throughout the whole Reich.
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Канинская, Г. Н. « "War Culture" in German Postcards of 1914-1918 ». Диалог со временем, no 79(79) (20 août 2022) : 404–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.21267/aquilo.2022.79.79.029.

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В статье рассматривается монография доктора исторических наук А.С. Медякова, изданная в 2021 г. В ней автор, на основе анализа солидного массива немецких открыток периода Первой мировой войны, показал, как формировалась «культура войны» в визуальной форме, как конструировался, поддерживался и эволюционировал в немецком обществе образ врага и союзника. Военный дискурс в книге представлен по многим срезам: социокультурному, историко-генетическому, идейно-пропаган-дистскому, сравнительному, лингвистическому. The article discusses the monograph of Doctor of Historical Sciences Alexander S. Medyakov, published in 2021. The author, who devoted a quarter of a century to collecting old postcards, for the first time in Russian historical science, showed based on the analysis of a solid array of German postcards from the period of the First World War, how the “culture of war” was formed » in visual form, how the image of the enemy and ally was designed, maintained and evolved in German society. The military discourse in the book is presented in many sections: socio-cultural, historical-genetic, ideological-propaganda, comparative, linguistic. The practice of distribution of printed materials is disclosed in detail, much attention is paid to the state and private press, competition in the postcard market, and censorship.
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Moraru, Liliana, Viorel Ștefan Perieanu, Mihai Burlibașa, Claudia-Camelia Burcea, Mădălina Violeta Perieanu, Mădălina Adriana Malița, Irina-Adriana Beuran et al. « REPUTED DENTISTS AND / OR SPECIALISTS IN THE ORO-MAXILLO-FACIAL FIELD WHO WORKED IN FRENCH CIVIL AND MILITARY HOSPITALS DURING THE FIRST WORLD WAR (1914-1918) ». Romanian Medical Journal 68, no 2 (30 juin 2021) : 315–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.37897/rmj.2021.2.30.

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The First World War was and is considered the most terrible conflagration of all time. Thus, over 65,000,000 soldiers made up the corps of land armies, naval and air forces, combat armies that participated in the conduct of military operations during the First World War. About 8,500,000 people died and more than 21,000,000 were injured. France was one of the countries most affected by this war, its medical services, including dentistry and oral and maxillofacial surgery, being completely obsolete. Thus, in this material, we tried to describe some important figures of French oral and maxillofacial dentistry and surgery, which were active in French civil and military hospitals during the First World War (1914-1918).
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Sabancı, Zeynep, et Somer Alp Şimşeker. « A NEW TYPE OF WARFARE : Chemical Filling Facilities in Istanbul, 1914–1918 ». Journal of the International Committee for the History of Technology 28, no 2 (15 décembre 2023) : 63–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.11590/icon.2023.2.03.

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In the total war era, states committed their scientific research to rapidly changing warfare conditions, making the management of war the primary goal of contemporary states. The weakness of primary weapons in neutralising the enemy (or enemies) was obvious from the beginning of the First World War. Constantly changing war strategies, integration of civilians into warfare, and the growing sense of impotence as the war proceeded longer than expected, prompted a return to the components of violence. Although research into the use of different chemicals, gases, and suffocating substances in weapons was not something new, its successful employment climaxed during the First World War. This study provides an analysis of the employment of chemical weapons during the First World War and revisits the scarce arguments on whether the Ottomans had taken part in producing chemical weapons. The primary focus here is the gasfilling facilities established in Istanbul under the supervision of German efforts for military purposes. Additionally, the unanticipated extraordinary effects of the use of chemical weapons, the strategies employed to cause attrition in trenches, and its effects on the Ottoman army are within the scope of this article.
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Zhvanko, Liubov. « Refugees and Emigrants in Europe : Retrospective View of the Problem (1914 – 2015) ». European Historical Studies, no 15 (2020) : 87–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2020.15.7.

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The proposed article summarizes the vision of the problem of displaced persons and refugees on the European continent in last century. Their appearance was caused by military conflicts of different origins: from two world wars to a series of local armed confrontations. The historiographical story mainly presents the key works of Western European researchers, directly relevant to the topic outlined in the article, the leading researchers of the study of refugee issues. The study presents the original concept of the author – the periodization of the appearance and stay of refugees in Europe. The author assumes that during the XX – XXI centuries. there were nine waves of escape. Their appearance – military conflicts of different nature. There are two peaks of refuge, caused by the classic cause – the world wars with the epicenter on the European continent. Among the waves she named: the first – during the First World War (1914 – 1918); the second – the inter-war upheavals (1919 – 1939); third – the Second World War and the first years after its end (1939 – 1956); the fourth – refugees from Hungary (1956) and the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic (1968); fifth – decolonization processes in the African continent (1960s); sixth – the breakup of Yugoslavia (1992-1997); the seventh – the collapse of the USSR (the beginning of the 1990s); eighth – Ukraine and the hybrid war (from 2014); ninth – the ‘European migration crisis’ (2015). The realities of the continent are still complex: the Russian Federation’s unleashed hybrid war against a sovereign state of Ukraine has provoked another wave of displaced persons. Within a year, the European Union’s authorities faced a new challenge – the “migration crisis”. A historical retrospective of the phenomenon shows that the problem is global and difficult to solve. The author singled out the period of the I World War (1914–1918) because it initiated the first mass appearance of refugees on different sides of the fronts, and therefore caused the first mass displacement of civilians on the continent. All subsequent waves of refugees can be considered as indirect consequences of this military conflict.
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Thèses sur le sujet "World War 1914-1918 - Military nursing"

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Rae, Ruth. « Jessie Tomlins an Australian army nurse - World War One / ». Connect to full text, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/840.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 2001.
"... The letters, postcards and photographs that Jessie, Fred and Will sent home to their mother and family, as well as Fred's fourteen diaries, form the foundation of this thesis..." -- p. 2. Title from title screen (viewed Apr. 23, 2008). Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Dept. of Clinical Nursing, Faculty of Nursing. Includes bibliography. Also available in print form.
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Hivick, Jennifer Rose. « If I Fail, He Dies : Military Nursing in the 1918-1919 Influenza Pandemic ». Kent State University / OhioLINK, 2020. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=kent1595515163501909.

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Poynter, Denise J. « 'The report on her transfer was shell shock' : a study of the psychological disorders of nurses and female Voluntary Aid Detachments who served alongside the British and Allied Expeditionary Forces during the First World War, 1914-1918 ». Thesis, University of Northampton, 2008. http://nectar.northampton.ac.uk/2682/.

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Shell Shock, described as the ‘emblematic psychiatric disorder’ of the First World War has long been synonymous with its soldiers. Its association with close proximity to exploding shells and thus the front lines, leading to the various symptoms of ‘shock’, has both facilitated and ensured its existence throughout the twentieth and twenty first centuries as a masculine affliction. Of the many shell shock studies that have been produced over the last few decades all have focused purely on the experience of the male combatant, predominantly because of this long held preoccupation with ‘front-line’ warfare and its consequences apparently being the preserve of men. Despite the prolonged interest and analysis of shell shock by medical and social historians along with a significant amount of work by feminist and, more recently, revisionist historians, detailing the involvement of women in the First World War, there is stHl no comprehensive study of the psychological problems encountered and suffered by the women who served alongside the British Expeditionary Forces (BEE). However, this study of the roles and duties of a specific group of women, namely nurses, voluntary aid detachments, and ambulance drivers, reveals they frequently endured a variety of traumatic experiences, involving injuries and fatalities, through the vicarious witnessing and dealing with horrific sights and sounds, all compounded by extremes of conditions and privations. Many, if not all, of these factors were given as antecedents for war neurosis in soldiers. Yet, while the nurse has been idolised for her role in the Great War, her experience of psychological ‘breakdown’ has not been examined. This thesis, through the analysis of professional medical literature, of medical case notes, personal testimonies, diaries and autobiographies, is a contribution to the areas of women’s history, medical history and, more specifically, to the history of psychological war trauma. Following a review of the literature in chapter one, chapter two is a re-examination of the proximity of nurses to the fighting zones and therefore of their exposure to danger. Chapter three analyses the nurses’ experience and subsequent symptoms of war trauma, including, importantly, how contemporary medical authorities understood the disorder, and then cared for and managed their female sufferers. These two chapters fundamentally argue that the notion of war-induced traumatic neurosis being the preserve of men is essentially pretence, and that this ‘focus’ on male sufferers means the history of the condition is incomplete. Chapter four essentially examines the issues of repatriation faced by these nurses, specifically examining the evolution of war disability pensions process of which they were excluded until 1920. It also looks at how the nurse, as female war veteran, coped with the consequences of her war experience. In conclusion, this thesis asserts that these nurses did indeed suffer psychologically for their involvement in this war and not because their symptoms and disorders ‘resembled’ those experienced by men, but were in fact, indistinguishable to the extent that some nurses were classed as ‘shellshocked’
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Jenkins, Danny R. « Winning trench warfare battlefield intelligence in the Canadian Corps, 1914-1918 / ». Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape9/PQDD_0018/NQ57601.pdf.

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Mepham, Leslie P. « Making their mark, Canadian snipers and the Great War, 1914-1918 ». Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp01/MQ30969.pdf.

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Oram, Gerard Christopher. « "What alternative punishment is there?" : military executions during World War I ». Thesis, [n.p.], 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/.

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Dye, Peter John. « Air power's midwife : logistics support for Royal Flying Corps operations on the Western Front 1914-1918 ». Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2014. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/4845/.

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The development of the British air weapon on the Western Front during the First World War represented a revolution in the way that national resources were employed in exploiting a technological opportunity to achieve tactical and operational advantage. Logistic competence was the precondition for air superiority and the 'modern style of warfare' — indirect, predicted artillery fire. The Royal Flying Corps' logistic staffs, led by Brigadier-General Robert Brooke-Popham, demonstrated considerable agility in meeting the demands of three-dimensional warfare. Sustaining adequate numbers of front-line aircraft required substantial numbers of skilled and semi-skilled personnel, located largely beyond the battle zone, operating at a continuously high tempo while coping with rapid technological change and high wastage. These elements formed a complex, dynamic and integrated network that was also partly self-sustaining, in the form of salvage and repair, with the ability to compensate for shortfalls in aircraft and aero-engine production as well as unpredictable demand. The logistic principles developed on the Western Front provided the foundation for Royal Air Force success in the Second World War and anticipated the management practices that underpin today's global supply chain - as well as demonstrating the enduring interdependence of logistics and air power.
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Whittle, Eric Yvon. « British casualties on the Western Front 1914-1918 and their influence on the military conduct of the Second World War ». Thesis, University of Leicester, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/2381/4726.

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It is often asserted that British army casualties in the Great War were carelessly incurred and that this influenced the way Britain fought in the Second World War. Manpower was a prime resource in the mobilisation for total war but its scarcity only fully realised by end of 1917 when the army was cautioned about casualties. The government, however, had feared an early popular reaction against mounting casualties. It did not materialise: the incidence of casualties was diffused over time, and households had no mass media spreading intimate awareness of battlefield conditions. The army itself never mutinied over casualties or refused to fight. The country considered the casualties grievous but not inordinate or unnecessary. Between the wars unemployment and 'consumerism' mattered more to people than memories of the Great War., kept ritually alive by annual Armistice Day services. Welfare benefits increased, more children went to secondary school but social and political change was tardy. Many intellectuals turned pacifist but Nazi Germany made an anti-war-stance difficult. Air raids rather than memories of Great War casualties preoccupied the nation as it armed for war. In the Second World War army casualty lists were not regularly lengthy until the beginning of 1944 and did not have an adverse impact on civilian morale. The manpower shortage became acute earlier, in 1942, and army commanders were alerted to replacement problems. Politically, Churchill desired a strong, victorious British army but lack of men induced caution about casualties, particularly in relation to the invasion of Normandy, involving frontal amphibious attack on the German army. This caution communicated itself to the citizen armies in the field, which showed little natural bent for soldiering. These circumstances governed the way the army fought in the Second World War, not memories of Great War casualties - which were more numerous because of the extent over time and scale of the fighting.
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Millar, John Dermot History Australian Defence Force Academy UNSW. « A study in the limitations of command : General Sir William Birdwood and the A.I.F., 1914-1918 ». Awarded by:University of New South Wales - Australian Defence Force Academy. School of History, 1993. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/38742.

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Military command is the single most important factor in the conduct of warfare. To understand war and military success and failure, historians need to explore command structures and the relationships between commanders. In World War I, a new level of higher command had emerged: the corps commander. Between 1914 and 1918, the role of corps commanders and the demands placed upon them constantly changed as experiences brought illumination and insight. Yet the men who occupied these positions were sometimes unable to cope with the changing circumstances and the many significant limitations which were imposed upon them. Of the World War I corps commanders, William Birdwood was one of the longest serving. From the time of his appointment in December 1914 until May 1918, Birdwood acquired an experience of corps command which was perhaps more diverse than his contemporaries during this time. He is, then, an ideal subject for a prolonged assessment of this level of command. This thesis has two principal objectives. The first is to identify and assess those factors which limited Birdwood???s capacity and ability to command. The second is to explore the institutional constraints placed on corps commanders during the 1914-1918 war. Surprisingly, this is a comparatively barren area of research. Because very few officers spent much time as corps commanders on their way to higher command appointments and because the role of the corps commanders in military planning and in the conduct of operations was not immediately apparent, their role has been practically ignored. Historians have tended to concentrate on the Army and divisional levels creating a deficient view of higher military command in World War I. However, corps commanders could and did play an important part in planning operations and in military affairs generally. Birdwood???s experience at Gallipoli and in France reflect some of the changes to command structures that were prompted by the successes and failures of operations directed at the corps level. In as much as these two theatres of war were vastly different and Birdwood was confronted with dissimilar problems, it is possible to draw some general conclusions about the evolution of higher command after 1914. Using a wide range of primary and secondary sources located in Australian and British archives, this thesis traces Birdwood???s career as a corps commander at Gallipoli and on the Western Front. It also examines his tenure as G.O.C. of the A.I.F.
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Shamberg, Neil S. « Shell shock in the origins of British psychiatry ». Virtual Press, 1997. http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1045637.

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This study has presented a comprehensive overview of the origins of modern British and American military psychiatry, chiefly in response to World War I shell shock. The study examined the state of British psychiatry during the nineteenth century, as the new railroads, mines, and factories produced accident victims with post-traumatic stress disorders. As World War I began, psychoanalysis was in its infancy, and most British psychiatrists faced with a victim of shell shock fell back on an eclectic mix of treatments, including electro-shock therapy, hot baths, massages, moral persuasion, lectures, exhortation, etc. While a few British and American psychiatrists practiced either psychotherapy or disciplinary methods exclusively, the majority of practitioners used a variety of methods, depending on the doctor's point of view and the circumstances of the case at, hand. Psychotherapeutic developments in the inter-war period are also explored and discussed.
Department of History
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Livres sur le sujet "World War 1914-1918 - Military nursing"

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Stölzle, Astrid. Kriegskrankenpflege im Ersten Weltkrieg : Das Pflegepersonal der freiwilligen Krankenpflege in den Etappen des Deutschen Kaiserreichs. Stuttgart : Steiner, 2013.

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The roses of No Man's Land. London : Macmillan, 1990.

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MacDonald, Lyn. The roses of No Man's land. London : Penguin, 1993.

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Macdonald, Lyn. The roses of no man's land. New York : Atheneum, 1989.

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McEwen, Yvonne. It's a long way to Tipperary : British and Irish nurses in the Great War. Dunfermline, Scotland : Cualann Press, 2006.

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The other Anzacs : Nurses at war, 1914-18. Crows Nest, N.S.W : Allen & Unwin, 2008.

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Rees, Peter. The other Anzacs : The extraordinary story of our World War I nurses. Crows Nest, N.S.W : Allen & Unwin, 2009.

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Rees, Peter. The other Anzacs : The extraordinary story of our World War I nurses. Crows Nest, N.S.W : Allen & Unwin, 2009.

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Italiane alla guerra : L'assistenza ai feriti 1915-1918. Venezia : Marsilio, 2003.

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Morton, Desmond. When your number's up : The Canadian soldier in the First World War. Toronto : Random House of Canada, 1993.

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Chapitres de livres sur le sujet "World War 1914-1918 - Military nursing"

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Nielsen, Philipp. « War, 1914–1918 ». Dans Between Heimat and Hatred, 73–114. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190930660.003.0003.

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This chapter deals primarily with the experience of German Jewish conservatives and nationalists in the military during the First World War. It looks at Jewish soldiers as active participants in the German military, rather than as objects of the military’s actions. It focuses on frontline soldiers and the particular and peculiar position of military rabbis on the German Eastern Front. It proposes that the war, not least in the East, held great promise for German Jews. The chapter’s main argument is that, particularly in the East, Jewish Soldiers viewed themselves as active participants and contributors to the war until the very end. It thus adds to the growing focus on the way German Jews shaped the German war effort, notwithstanding the increasing antisemitism they experienced.
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« 2. The Military Effort, 1914–1918 ». Dans Canada and the First World War, Second Edition, 35–61. University of Toronto Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781487519681-006.

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« Military Operations and National Policies, 1914–1918 ». Dans The Purpose of the First World War, 7–26. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110443486-004.

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« Serbian War Aims and Military Strategy, 1914–1918 ». Dans The Purpose of the First World War, 79–94. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110443486-008.

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Erish, Andrew A. « 1914–1918 ». Dans Vitagraph, 111–57. University Press of Kentucky, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5810/kentucky/9780813181196.003.0005.

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This chapter encompasses the World War I years. Special attention is given to the company's role in the development of the feature film and creation of a distribution network to handle such longer productions, the relocation of Vitagraph's Los Angeles studio to Hollywood, the War's adverse impact on European profit and the company's consequent expansion of international sales to Latin America and Asia, and Vitagraph's lead in combating racial and gender prejudice through its movies. Blackton's controversial production, The Battle Cry of Peace, is profiled, conceived as propaganda in support of the Preparedness Movement that enjoyed the cooperation of top government leaders and the US military. The short-lived hostile takeover of Vitagraph by outside interests is explored in depth, as is the subsequent defection of Blackton to Paramount. The chapter concludes with Vitagraph's legal battle with fledgling producer Louis B. Mayer, which had long-term consequences for contract players.
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« Much More than Chemical Warfare ». Dans The Chemists' War : 1914–1918, 1–11. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/bk9781849739894-00001.

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The Allies and Central Powers employed a wide range of chemical warfare agents such as chlorine, phosgene, diphosgene, chloropicrin and mustard gas; however, chemical warfare was just one componentof the chemistry of the First World War. Chemists, chemistry, and chemicals underpinned the war effort in the trenches, in the tunnelling operations, in the air and at sea, and in the casualty clearing stations and military hospitals. Chemistry was central to explosives, propellants, gas mask filters, metal and alloy production for the manufacture of machinery, the chemical dyes and mineral pigments used in the uniforms of soldiers and nurses, and photography. This chapter outlines why and how chemistry came to be so important in the First World War, earning it the title “The Chemists’ War.”
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« Women's Contributions ». Dans The Chemists' War : 1914–1918, 25–41. The Royal Society of Chemistry, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/bk9781849739894-00025.

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As far as chemistry was concerned, the total war – a war where a combatant nation employs all its available resources to fight the war – of 1914–1918 more or less involved every chemist in one way or another; all available chemicals; every academic, government and industrial chemistry laboratory; every last test-tube and Bunsen burner; and the entire chemical industry. This chapter details the role of women during the war, and the rise of female employment. Women took on jobs that had previously been considered unsuitable. Women worked in munitions factories, as nurses on the front line, and trained as doctors to replace the men who had been called up for service in the Royal Army Medical Corps. Female chemists, many of whom were employed in schools and universities, also played an important role during the war, replacing the men who had signed on for active service. The chapter provides a more detailed insight to several notable figures: Martha Annie Whiteley (OBE), who worked on the synthesis of anaesthetics and drugs needed for military hospitals; Marjory Stephenson (MBE), who interrupted her medical research to join the British Red Cross; and Muriel Robertson, who worked on the problem of gas gangrene during both world wars.
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O’Dell, T. H. « The Second World War ». Dans Inventions and Official Secrecy, 95–112. Oxford University PressOxford, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198259428.003.0008.

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Abstract Writing of the Great War of 1914-18, Randolph S. Bourne (1886- 1918) put forward the slogan ‘War is the Health of the State’ in one of his essays (Resek (1964), 71). Bourne also remarked upon the enthusiasm with which men with administrative or managerial expertise had volunteered for military service in the war, ‘as if the war and they had been waiting for each other’ (ibid. 60). In the Second World War we find a very similar situation with men of technical expertise, the ‘boffins’ as they were called in the United Kingdom, although the origin of this new word has been lost.
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Strachan, Hew. « The Scottish Soldier and Scotland, 1914–1918 ». Dans A Global Force. Edinburgh University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474402736.003.0004.

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This chapter addresses Scottish military service during the First World War, showing how from having underperformed before the war, Scotland overperformed during the war’s first two years. Particularly striking was how many recruits came from agricultural backgrounds, although in absolute terms the big cities still contributed more men. As the Territorial Army (TA) was the principal Scottish route into the army, the battle of Loos in October 1915 had an enormous local impact: this was Scotland’s equivalent of the Somme. Every Scottish infantry regiment was represented, and both the 9th and 15th Scottish Divisions were TA Lowland Divisions. From Loos came the literary representation of the war, especially Ian Hay’s The First Hundred Thousand and John Buchan’s war poetry. The effect of the First World War, with Scottish infantry regiments raising twenty-plus battalions, was to disseminate those regimental identities much more widely across Scottish society. An enhanced Scottish identity was created, and it emerged in a military context. Overwhelmingly this identity was set within the context of the Union and the empire.
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Stevenson, David. « Resolution by Force November 1917-November 1918 ». Dans The First World War and International Politics, 183–235. Oxford University PressOxford, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198202813.003.0006.

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Abstract From its Balkan origins the war had grown into a world-wide conflagration that a triple military, diplomatic, and domestic political stalemate fuelled until the end of 1917. It kindled a multiplicity of successor conflicts, one of which-the Russian Civil War-claimed more lives than did the contest between the Allies and the Central Powers itself. As long as the central struggle continued, it and local wars across the globe were liable to intermesh. In 1918 intervention in Russia by both sides was the most dramatic case in point. But once the central struggle had been resolved, the peripheral ones could be fought out with largely local forces, and gradually brought to an end. This chapter will therefore concentrate on the suspension of hostilities in the war that had begun in 1914. It will examine the separate treaties concluded on the Eastern Front in the spring of 1918; the intervention in Russia, in spite of this, by the Central Powers and the Allies in the summer; the commitment by the Allies to dismember Austria-Hungary; and the Southern and Western European armistices at the end of the year. As in 1917, an underlying theme of these developments was the failure of conciliation. But all three elements of the previous deadlock were now crumbling, and political decisions acquired a new finality as the war of movement returned. The relationship between military and political developments was, as ever, intricate. But for statesmen at the time it was omnipresent.
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Rapports d'organisations sur le sujet "World War 1914-1918 - Military nursing"

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Strand branch, London - Military Department staff at work during First World War, 1914-1918. Reserve Bank of Australia, mars 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.47688/rba_archives_pn-002149.

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