Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


Sign Up for Fishpond's Best Deals Delivered to You Every Day
Go
World War I in Central ­and Eastern Europe
Politics, Conflict and Military Experience (International Library of Twentieth Century History)
By Judith Devlin (Edited by), John Paul Newman (Edited by), Maria Falina (Edited by)

Rating
Format
Hardback, 352 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 30 July 2018

Foreword

Acknowledgements

List of Contributors

Introduction Judith Devlin



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

Mark Lewis



2. Fellow Citizens, Unwanted Foreigners: The Refugee Crisis

in Wartime Moravia

Kathryn E. Densford



3. Population Displacement in the Habsburg Empire During

World War I

Francesco Frizzera



4. Italian - Austrian Prisoners of War and Italian Political and Military Involvement in the Eastern Front During World War I

Alessandro Salvador



5. Violence, Destruction and Resistance: Serbia's and Montenegro's Experiences of the Great War

Dmitar Tasic¿



6. 'We're Half-way to Asia Here': The Conduct of the German Army Units on the Eastern Front in 1914 and 1939

Jan Szkudlinski



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

Simone A. Bellezza



8. Red Peril or Yellow Peril? British Attitudes Towards the Russian Other: Northern Russia, 1918 - 19

Steven Balbirnie



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

Georg Grote



10. The Emperor's Broken Bust: Representations of the Habsburg 'Shatterzone' in World War I

Andreas Agocs



11. A Mutilated Society: Disabled Ex-Servicemen of the Tsarist Russian Army

Alexandre Sumpf



12. Keeping Up Appearances: The Aims of the Anglo-Russian Hospital in Petrograd, 1915 - 18

Shannon Brady



13. 'Who Died for the Homeland?' Celebrating Victory in East-Central Europe After World War I: An Overview of the Unknown Soldiers

Isabelle Davion



14. Memory of World War I and Veterans' Organisations in Poland, 1918 - 26

Joanna Urbanek



Conclusion Wartime Experiences and Ensuing Transformations

John Paul Newman and Maria Falina



Notes 264

Selected Further Reading 328

Index 330

Show more

Our Price
HK$1,032
Ships from UK Estimated delivery date: 21st Apr - 28th Apr from UK
Free Shipping Worldwide

Buy Together
+
Buy Together
HK$2,132
Elsewhere Price
HK$2,215.10
You Save HK$83.10 (4%)

Product Description

Foreword

Acknowledgements

List of Contributors

Introduction Judith Devlin



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

Mark Lewis



2. Fellow Citizens, Unwanted Foreigners: The Refugee Crisis

in Wartime Moravia

Kathryn E. Densford



3. Population Displacement in the Habsburg Empire During

World War I

Francesco Frizzera



4. Italian - Austrian Prisoners of War and Italian Political and Military Involvement in the Eastern Front During World War I

Alessandro Salvador



5. Violence, Destruction and Resistance: Serbia's and Montenegro's Experiences of the Great War

Dmitar Tasic¿



6. 'We're Half-way to Asia Here': The Conduct of the German Army Units on the Eastern Front in 1914 and 1939

Jan Szkudlinski



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

Simone A. Bellezza



8. Red Peril or Yellow Peril? British Attitudes Towards the Russian Other: Northern Russia, 1918 - 19

Steven Balbirnie



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

Georg Grote



10. The Emperor's Broken Bust: Representations of the Habsburg 'Shatterzone' in World War I

Andreas Agocs



11. A Mutilated Society: Disabled Ex-Servicemen of the Tsarist Russian Army

Alexandre Sumpf



12. Keeping Up Appearances: The Aims of the Anglo-Russian Hospital in Petrograd, 1915 - 18

Shannon Brady



13. 'Who Died for the Homeland?' Celebrating Victory in East-Central Europe After World War I: An Overview of the Unknown Soldiers

Isabelle Davion



14. Memory of World War I and Veterans' Organisations in Poland, 1918 - 26

Joanna Urbanek



Conclusion Wartime Experiences and Ensuing Transformations

John Paul Newman and Maria Falina



Notes 264

Selected Further Reading 328

Index 330

Show more
Product Details
EAN
9781788311878
ISBN
1788311876
Publisher
Other Information
7 bw integrated
Dimensions
21.8 x 14.5 x 3.1 centimeters (0.55 kg)

Table of Contents

Foreword Acknowledgements List of Contributors Introduction Judith Devlin 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 Mark Lewis 2. Fellow Citizens, Unwanted Foreigners: The Refugee Crisis in Wartime Moravia Kathryn E. Densford 3. Population Displacement in the Habsburg Empire During World War I Francesco Frizzera 4. Italian – Austrian Prisoners of War and Italian Political and Military Involvement in the Eastern Front During World War I Alessandro Salvador 5. Violence, Destruction and Resistance: Serbia’s and Montenegro’s Experiences of the Great War Dmitar Tasic´ 6. ‘We’re Half-way to Asia Here’: The Conduct of the German Army Units on the Eastern Front in 1914 and 1939 Jan Szkudlinski 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 Simone A. Bellezza 8. Red Peril or Yellow Peril? British Attitudes Towards the Russian Other: Northern Russia, 1918 – 19 Steven Balbirnie 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 Georg Grote 10. The Emperor’s Broken Bust: Representations of the Habsburg ‘Shatterzone’ in World War I Andreas Agocs 11. A Mutilated Society: Disabled Ex-Servicemen of the Tsarist Russian Army Alexandre Sumpf 12. Keeping Up Appearances: The Aims of the Anglo-Russian Hospital in Petrograd, 1915 – 18 Shannon Brady 13. ‘Who Died for the Homeland?’ Celebrating Victory in East-Central Europe After World War I: An Overview of the Unknown Soldiers Isabelle Davion 14. Memory of World War I and Veterans’ Organisations in Poland, 1918 – 26 Joanna Urbanek Conclusion Wartime Experiences and Ensuing Transformations John Paul Newman and Maria Falina Notes 264 Selected Further Reading 328 Index 330

Promotional Information

New perspectives on World War I in Central and Eastern Europe

About the Author

Judith Devlin is Senior Lecturer in History at University College Dublin. Her research focuses on the political culture of Stalinism between the 1920s and 1950s. She has published monographs on the cultural history of France and the contemporary history of Russia and three edited volumes, most recently War of Words: Culture and the Media in the Making of the Cold War. John Paul Newman is Lecturer in Twentieth-century European History at NUI Maynooth. He has researched and published extensively on the history of the impact of World War I in Central and Eastern Europe and on the transnational history of World War I. He has edited a transnational study of veterans and their role in internationalist politics in the interwar period, The Great War and Veterans Internationalism and edited a study of the impact of the Great War in the successor states of Austria-Hungary, Sacrifice and Rebirth: The Legacy of the War in East-Central Europe. He is the author of Yugoslavia in the Shadow of War. Maria Falina is IRC postdoctoral fellow at the School of History, University College Dublin. Her research focuses on the history of religion and politics in Southeastern Europe and the history of political thought in East Central Europe in the late-nineteenth and twentieth centuries. She is co-editor of A History of Political Thought in East Central Europe. Her monograph, Religion and Politics in Interwar Yugoslavia: Serbian Nationalism and East Orthodox Christianity is forthcoming from I.B.Tauris.

Reviews

This volume is an invaluable contribution to the recent re-evaluation of the story of the First World War in East Central Europe. It offers a set of often fascinating case studies that, skilfully put together, summarize recent trends in historical scholarship while confirming key paradigmatic shifts, further supporting the obvious need to move beyond nationalized meta-histories to actor-based, transnational perspectives.
*Slavonic & East European Review*

Show more
Review this Product
Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Item ships from and is sold by Fishpond World Ltd.

Back to top