Clara s War

Clara s War
Author: Clara Kramer,Stephen Glantz
Publsiher: Emblem Editions
Total Pages: 362
Release: 2010-04-06
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781551993683

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“You lose your loved ones, and still you want to live.” On 21 July 1942, the Nazis reached the small Polish town of Zolkiew. Life for fifteen-year-old Clara Kramer would never be the same. While those around her were either slaughtered or transported, three families found perilous refuge in a hand-dug cellar. Hers was one of them. Living above and protecting them were the Becks. Mrs. Beck had been the families’ maid. Mr. Beck was alcoholic and a self-professed anti-Semite, yet he risked his life to keep his charges safe. But survival under his protection proved to be anything but predictable. Whether it was his nightly drinking sessions with officers of the SS in the room just above or his torrid affair with one of the hiding women, it seemed that Clara and the others often had as much to fear from Beck as they did from the war. Clara’s mother told her to keep a diary while they lived in the bunker in order to fill her time and “so the world would know what happened to us.” Over sixty years later, Clara Kramer has finally turned those diaries into a compelling and heartbreaking memoir — a story of love and memory and survival.

Clara s Great War

Clara s Great War
Author: Evelyn Rothstein
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 0981534597

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Love and Death in the Great War

Love and Death in the Great War
Author: Andrew J. Huebner
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2018-02-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780190853938

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Americans today harbor no strong or consistent collective memory of the First World War. Ask why the country fought or what they accomplished, and "democracy" is the most likely if vague response. The circulation of confusing or lofty rationales for intervention began as soon as President Woodrow Wilson secured a war declaration in April 1917. Yet amid those shifting justifications, Love and Death in the Great War argues, was a more durable and resonant one: Americans would fight for home and family. Officials in the military and government, grasping this crucial reality, invested the war with personal meaning, as did popular culture. "Make your mother proud of you/And the Old Red White and Blue" went George Cohan's famous tune "Over There." Federal officials and their allies in public culture, in short, told the war story as a love story. Intervention came at a moment when arbiters of traditional home and family were regarded as under pressure from all sides: industrial work, women's employment, immigration, urban vice, woman suffrage, and the imagined threat of black sexual aggression. Alleged German crimes in France and Belgium seemed to further imperil women and children. War promised to restore convention, stabilize gender roles, and sharpen male character. Love and Death in the Great War tracks such ideas of redemptive war across public and private spaces, policy and implementation, home and front, popular culture and personal correspondence. In beautifully rendered prose, Andrew J. Huebner merges untold stories of ordinary men and women with a history of wartime culture. Studying the radiating impact of war alongside the management of public opinion, he recovers the conflict's emotional dimensions--its everyday rhythms, heartbreaking losses, soaring possibilities, and broken promises.

The Joseph M Bruccoli Great War Collection at the University of South Carolina

The Joseph M  Bruccoli Great War Collection at the University of South Carolina
Author: Elizabeth A. Sudduth
Publsiher: Univ of South Carolina Press
Total Pages: 428
Release: 2005
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1570035903

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Bruccoli Great War Collection at the University of South Carolina: An Illustrated Catalogue provides a reference tool for the study of one of the great watershed moments in history on both sides of the Atlantic serving historians, researchers, and collectors.

This Small Army of Women

This Small Army of Women
Author: Linda J. Quiney
Publsiher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2017-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780774830744

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With her linen head scarf and white apron emblazoned with a red cross, the Voluntary Aid Detachment nurse, or VAD, has become a romantic emblem of the Great War. This book tells the story of the nearly 2,000 women from Canada and Newfoundland who volunteered to “do their bit” overseas and at home. Well-educated and middle-class but largely untrained, VADs were excluded from Canadian military hospitals overseas (the realm of the professional nurse) but helped solve Britain’s nursing deficit. Their struggle to secure a place at their brothers’ bedsides reveals much about the tensions surrounding amateur and professional nurses and women’s evolving role outside the home.

Creative Women of the Lost Generation

Creative Women of the    Lost Generation
Author: Kimberly Francis,Margot Irvine
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 245
Release: 2023-08-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781000924640

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This book explores the creative women of the "Lost Generation" including painters, sculptors, film makers, writers, singers, composers, dancers, and impresarios who all pursued artistic careers in the years leading up to, during, and following World War I. These women’s stories, and the art they created, commissioned, mobilized as propaganda, and performed shed light on the shifting nature of gender norms during this period. With the combined knowledge and expertise from different contributors, chapters in this book consider how modernist practices continued their development in women’s hands during the war through networks forged by and for women artists in the absence of their male colleagues. These chapters also reflect on how, in many cases, the dissolution of these structures after the November 1918 armistice had detrimental consequences for their professional trajectories. This book challenges the place creative women currently hold in the historical record while also clarifying how these artists and impresarios contributed to wartime and post-war culture. This collection of essays will be of great value to scholars interested in social and gender history of the twentieth century, as well as historians of the arts through offering nuanced understanding of the essential work of female creative professionals, highlighting artistic women’s experiences of resistance, mourning, and reinvention in the shadow of the Great War.

The Great War in American and British Cinema 1918 1938

The Great War in American and British Cinema  1918   1938
Author: Ryan Copping
Publsiher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 205
Release: 2020-11-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783030606718

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This book recounts the reception of selected films about the Great War released between 1918 and 1938 in the USA and Great Britain. It discusses the role that popular cinema played in forming and reflecting public opinion about the War and its political and cultural aftermath in both countries. Although the centenary has produced a wide number of studies on the memorialisation of the Great War in Britain and to a lesser degree the USA, none of them focused on audience reception in relation to the Anglo-American ‘circulatory system’ of Trans-Atlantic culture.

The Great War and the Origins of Humanitarianism 1918 1924

The Great War and the Origins of Humanitarianism  1918 1924
Author: Bruno Cabanes
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 399
Release: 2014-03-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107020627

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Pioneering study of the transition from war to peace and the birth of humanitarian rights after the Great War.