World War I in Central and Eastern Europe

Titel: World War I in Central and Eastern Europe : politics, conflict and military experience / edited by Judith Devlin, Maria Falina and John Paul Newman
Beteiligt: ; ;
Veröffentlicht: London : I.B. Tauris, 2018
Umfang: XVI, 336 Seiten
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
International library of twentieth century history ; 126
RVK-Notation:
Schlagworte:
Andere Ausgaben: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe
Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF
ISBN: 9781788311878 ; 9780755602261
  • Foreword
  • p. viii
  • Acknowledgements
  • p. xii
  • List of Contributors
  • p. xiii
  • Introduction
  • p. 1
  • Part I
  • New Frontiers of War: State Treatment of Non-Combatants
  • 1
  • The Failed Quest for Total Surveillance: The Internal Security Service in Austria-Hungary During World War I
  • p. 19
  • 2
  • Fellow Citizens, Unwanted Foreigners: The Refugee Crisis in Wartime Moravia
  • p. 42
  • 3
  • Population Displacement in the Habsburg Empire During World War I
  • p. 60
  • 4
  • Italian-Austrian Prisoners of War and Italian Political and Military Involvement in the Eastern Front During World War I
  • p. 73
  • 5
  • Violence, Destruction and Resistance: Serbia's and Montenegro's Experiences of the Great War
  • p. 88
  • 6
  • 'We're Half-way to Asia Here': The Conduct of the German Army Units on the Eastern Front in 1914 and 1939
  • p. 101
  • Part II
  • Soldiers and Veterans: Experience, Understanding and Memory
  • 7
  • Choosing Their Own Nation: National and Political Identities of the Italian POWs in Russia, 1914-21
  • p. 119
  • 8
  • Red Petil or Yellow Peril? British Attitudes Towards the Russian Other: Northern Russia, 1918-19
  • p. 138
  • 9
  • 'I am Well and I Hope the Same of You. I Will Soon Change Location': World War I Field Postcards to a Disappearing Homeland
  • p. 160
  • 10
  • The Emperor's Broken Bust: Representations of the Habsburg 'Shatterzone' in World War I
  • p. 177
  • 11
  • A Mutilated Society: Disabled Ex-Servicemen of the Tsarist Russian Army
  • p. 195
  • 12
  • Keeping Up Appearances: The Aims of the Anglo-Russian Hospital in Petrograd, 1915-18
  • p. 208
  • 13
  • 'Who Died for the Homeland?' Celebrating Victory in East-Central Europe After World War I: An Overview of the Unknown Soldiers
  • p. 224
  • 14
  • Memory of World War I and Veterans' Organisations in Poland, 1918-26
  • p. 243
  • Conclusion Wartime Experiences and Ensuing Transformations
  • p. 255
  • Notes
  • p. 264
  • Selected Further Reading
  • p. 328
  • Index
  • p. 330