Britain and World War One

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1914
1918
A01=Alan G. V. Simmonds
air raid civilian impact
Alan
Alan Simmonds
Author_Alan G. V. Simmonds
Britain's Home Front
Britain’s Home Front
British social history
Category=JP
Category=JW
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Category=NHTB
Category=NHW
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Cenotaph
civilians
County War Agricultural Committees
Dead Men
Derby Scheme
Empty Tomb
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eq_history
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First World War
gender roles analysis
Germany
Henry Newbolt
Home Front
Imperial War Graves Commission
industrial mobilisation
Infant Welfare
Infant Welfare Centres
Irish Republican Brotherhood
Jessie Pope
Kitchener
Land Army
Lilian Barker
Mark 1
Munitions Workers
National Shell Factories
Optical Munitions
Poetry
rural society transformation
Simmonds
social change during First World War
Telephone Exchange
Verse Lines
wartime propaganda studies
Welfare Supervisor
Wellington House
Women's Wartime Experiences
Women’s Wartime Experiences
Woolwich Arsenal
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415455381
  • Weight: 780g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Oct 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The First World War appears as a fault line in Britain’s twentieth-century history. Between August 1914 and November 1918 the titanic struggle against Imperial Germany and her allies consumed more people, more money and more resources than any other conflict that Britain had hitherto experienced. For the first time, it opened up a Home Front that stretched into all parts of the British polity, society and culture, touching the lives of every citizen regardless of age, gender and class: vegetables were even grown in the gardens of Buckingham Palace.

Britain and World War One throws attention on these civilians who fought the war on the Home Front. Harnessing recent scholarship, and drawing on original documents, oral testimony and historical texts, this book casts a fresh look over different aspects of British society during the four long years of war. It revisits the early war enthusiasm and the making of Kitchener’s new armies; the emotive debates over conscription; the relationships between politics, government and popular opinion; women working in wartime industries; the popular experience of war and the question of social change.

This book also explores areas of wartime Britain overlooked by recent histories, including the impact of the war on rural society; the mobilization of industry and the importance of technology; responses to air raids and food and housing shortages; and the challenges to traditional social and sexual mores and wartime culture. Britain and World War One is essential reading for all students and interested lay readers of the First World War.

Alan G.V. Simmonds is a lecturer in Modern History at the University of Hull, UK, specializing in British society during the First World War and the inter-war era. He has published on aspects of British housing policy since 1945.

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