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Reporting the Great War: news from the home front

Part of the The Great War on the home front series
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- The Great War of 1914-1918 was the worldÆs first total conflict.

It drew the whole population into the war effort as never before.

The armed forces recruited on a scale that was previously unimaginable, and the munitions industries drew more and more citizens into the labour market.

The entire national economy was thrown onto a war footing.

The local newspapers of those years provide a unique picture of these momentous changes, and Reporting the Great War uses their words to recapture the experience of the time.

It illustrates in telling detail the human tragedies and triumphs of a nation at war and the day-to-day preoccupations of communities trying to find normality during an unprecedented emergency. - Sections of the population were gripped by æhun-phobiaÆ û the fear that everything Germanic was an agent of the enemy.

Terror of aerial attack and the shortages caused by the German submarine blockade brought the reality of war close to home.

Unfamiliar terms entered the national vocabulary û conscription, conscientious objection, rationing û and pre-war assumptions, from the role of women to the use of alcohol, were challenged and changed. - Stuart HyltonÆs fascinating account of the British home front during the Great War, as it was seen through the newspaper columns of the day, shows a nation seemingly sleepwalking into a war in 1914 and emerging, four years later, with the hope that a better world would come with the peace. -

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Product Details
Pen & Sword
1473839475 / 9781473839472
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
940.341
30/08/2014
England
English
163 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%