Reading and the First World War
1.1 hrs read
Rate this book:
About This Book
What role did reading play in the lives of those who experienced the First World War? This volume demonstrates that reading was both the prime leisure occupation and the main means for transmitting information for combatants and civilians during the war. Ranging from ordinary soldiers to conscientious objectors and from to war artists to civilians in occupied Belgium, the readers uncovered in this volume read for a multitude of reasons. Letters and books sent from home could bring soldiers in touch with family members and memories of lives lived before the war. Newspapers and trench journals helped maintain morale in the trenches and communicated war news and propaganda to civilian audiences. Bringing together respected specialists and emerging scholars, 'Reading in the First World War' reveals the diversity of reading practices at the time and the central importance of reading in the experience of conflict, at the front and at home.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Edmund King
A Northampton Miscellany (The Publications of the Northamptonshire Record Society)
Anglo-Norman Studies XXXVII
Anglo-Norman Studies XXXVII
Becoming Comprehensive : Case
Becoming Comprehensive : Case Histories : The Commonwealth and International Library
Communication and the Schools
Communication and the Schools : The Commonwealth and International Library
Education and Social Change :
Education and Social Change : A Volume in the Commonwealth and International Library
England 1175-1425