Results for ' First World War'

966 found
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  1.  34
    German philosophy and the First World War.Nicolas de Warren - 2023 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    Combining history and biography with astute philosophical analysis, Nicolas de Warren explores and reinterprets the intellectual trajectories of ten German philosophers as they reacted to and experienced the First World War. His book will enhance our understanding of the intimate and invariably complicated relationship between philosophy and war.
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  2.  19
    Being Prosthetic in the First World War and Weimar Germany.Boaz Neumann - 2010 - Body and Society 16 (3):93-126.
    In this article I discuss the prosthetic phenomenon during the First World War and Weimar Germany. As opposed to contemporary trends, with their inflationary use of the ‘prosthesis’, sometimes even hypothesizing ‘prostheticization’ as a paradigm, I seek to return the debate about the prosthesis to its historical concreteness. I describe the phenomenology of the prosthesis in three senses: first, in the statistical sense, in the form of a dramatic growth in the number of prostheses; second, in the (...)
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  3.  28
    The personal writings of First World War nurses: a study of the interplay of authorial intention and scholarly interpretation.Christine E. Hallett - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (4):320-329.
    The personal writings of First World War nurses and VADs (volunteers) provide the historian with a range of insights into the war and women's nursing roles within it. This paper offers a number of methodological perspectives on these writings. In particular, it emphasises two elements of engagement with texts that can act as important influences on subsequent historical writings: authorial intention and scholarly interpretation. In considering the interplay of these two elements, the paper emphasises the motivations both of (...)
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  4.  14
    Exploring The Netley British Red Cross Magazine: An example of the development of nursing and patient care during the First World War.Nestor Serrano-Fuentes & Elena Andina-Diaz - 2021 - Nursing Inquiry 28 (2):e12392.
    Netley Hospital played a crucial role in caring for the wounded during the nineteenth century and twentieth century, becoming one of the busiest military hospitals of the time. Simultaneously, Florence Nightingale delved into the concept of health and developed the theoretical basis of nursing. This research aims to describe the experiences related to nursing and patient care described in The Netley British Red Cross Magazine during the First World War. The analysis displays different nurses' roles and the influence (...)
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  5.  19
    Keynes and the First World War.Edward W. Fuller & Robert C. Whitten - 2017 - Libertarian Papers 9.
    It is widely believed that John Maynard Keynes wrote The Economic Consequences of the Peace to protest the reparations imposed on Germany after the First World War. The central thesis of this paper is that Britain’s war debt problem, not German reparations, led Keynes to write The Economic Consequences of the Peace. His main goal at the Paris Peace Conference was to restore Britain’s economic hegemony by solving the war debt problem he helped to create. We show that (...)
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  6.  15
    Social Darwinism, the British Labour Party, and the First World War.David Redvaldsen - 2021 - The European Legacy 27 (1):1-19.
    This article investigates whether the doctrine of social Darwinism had any bearing on the Labour Party’s decision to support Britain’s participation in the First World War. Many socialist intellect...
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  7.  21
    English nationalism and the first World War.Frans Coetzee - 1992 - History of European Ideas 15 (1-3):363-368.
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  8. Prisoners in The First World War.Alan Kramer - 2010 - In Sibylle Scheipers (ed.), Prisoners in War. Oxford University Press.
     
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  9.  33
    2. constructions of “home,”“front,” and women's military employment in firstworld‐war Britain: A spatial interpretation.Krisztina Robert - 2013 - History and Theory 52 (3):319-343.
    In First-World-War Britain, women's ambition to perform noncombatant duties for the military faced considerable public opposition. Nevertheless, by late 1916 up to 10,000 members of the female volunteer corps were working for the army, laying the foundation for some 90,000 auxiliaries of the official Women's Services, who filled support positions in the armed forces in the second half of the war. This essay focuses on the public debate in which the volunteers overcame their critics to understand how they (...)
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  10.  3
    The Slovak ethos of plebeian resistance and the First World War.Vasil Gluchman & Marta Gluchmanová - forthcoming - Studies in East European Thought:1-16.
    The authors examine the Slovak ethos of plebeian resistance to the First World War in several of its forms. First, they examine intellectual forms of resistance against war, against its Christian justification. Several Slovak authors emphasized that the First World War was in direct contradiction to Christian ethics, asserting that it served as proof of the failure of all European nations and their elites, who were proud of their humanity and ability to solve problems peacefully. (...)
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  11.  33
    The first World War, academic science, and the “two cultures”: Educational reforms at the University of Cambridge. [REVIEW]Zuoyue Wang - 1995 - Minerva 33 (2):107-127.
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  12.  29
    Chemical ‘canaries’: Munitions workers in the First World War.Patricia Fara - 2023 - History of Science 61 (4):546-560.
    In the early twentieth century, scientific innovations permanently changed international warfare. As chemicals traveled out of laboratories into factories and military locations, war became waged at home as well as overseas. Large numbers of women were employed in munitions factories during the First World War, but their public memories have been overshadowed by men who died on battlefields abroad; they have also been ignored in traditional histories of chemistry that focus on laboratory-based research. Mostly young and poorly educated, (...)
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  13.  28
    George Ellery Hale, the First World War, and the Advancement of Science in America.Daniel Kevles - 1968 - Isis 59 (4):427-437.
  14.  12
    The Wound and the First World War: `Cartesian' Surgeries to Embodied Being in Psychoanalysis, Electrification and Skin Grafting.Tom Slevin - 2008 - Body and Society 14 (2):39-61.
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  15.  22
    (2 other versions)Freud on the First World War.Koteska Jasna - 2019 - Researcher. European Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences 2 (4).
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  16.  6
    Philosophers at the front: phenomenology and the First World War.Nicolas de Warren & Thomas Vongehr (eds.) - 2017 - Leuven, België: Leuven University Press.
    An exceptional collection of letters, postcards, original writings, and photographs The First World War witnessed an unprecedented mobilization of philosophers and their families: as soldiers at the front; as public figures on the home front; as nurses in field hospitals; as mothers and wives; as sons and fathers. In Germany, the war irrupted in the midst of the rapid growth of Edmund Husserl's phenomenological movement – widely considered one of the most significant philosophical movements in twentieth century thought. (...)
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  17.  28
    Gramsci, the First World War, and the Problem of Politics vs Religion vs Economics in War.Maurice A. Finocchiaro - 2005 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 8 (4):407-419.
    Abstract This essay examines Gramsci?s writings about the First World War, primarily his immediate reflections in 1914?1918, but also relevant prison notes (1926?1937). The most striking feature of his attitude during the war years is ?Germanophilia?, a label I adapt from Croce, whose writings on the Great War also exhibited this attitude. A key common motivation was that political conflicts should not be turned into religious ones in which one portrays the enemy as an evil to be annihilated. (...)
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  18. Nietzsche after the first world war.Stefano Busellato - 2009 - Giornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 5 (3):657-663.
     
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  19.  24
    Multicultural Commemoration and West Indian Military Service in the First World War.Richard Smith - 2016 - Environment, Space, Place 8 (2):7-28.
    West Indian military service in the First World War is recalled in many settings. During the war, race and class boundaries of colonial society were temporarily eroded by visions of imperial unity, but quickly restated through post-war assertions of imperial authority. However, recollections of wartime sacrifices were kept alive by Pan-African, ex-service and emerging nationalist groups before being incorporated into independent Caribbean national identity and migrant West Indian communities. During the centenary commemorations, West Indian participation has increasingly been (...)
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  20.  16
    Faith, Tsar and Fatherland: Division and War Mobilization During the First World War.Celina Gado - 2020 - Constellations 11 (2).
    Faith, Tsar and Fatherland is an exploration of how religious, political, and ethnic differences influenced war mobilization in Russia prior to, and during, the First World War. Through the narrative of a sacred union, the Russian Imperial government unified an otherwise divided country into one cohesive whole, fighting to protect the Fatherland. In the name of patriotism, historically marginalized groups such as Russo-German settlers and Russian Muslims set aside political, religious, and cultural differences to fight alongside ethnic Russians (...)
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  21.  42
    Nature Trauma: Ecology and the Returning Soldier in First World War English and Scottish Fiction, 1918–1932.Samantha Walton - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 42 (2):213-223.
    Nature has been widely represented in literature and culture as healing, redemptive, unspoilt, and restorative. In the aftermath of the First World War, writers grappled with long cultural associations between nature and healing. Having survived a conflict in which relations between people, and the living environment had been catastrophically ruptured, writers asked: could rural and wild places offer meaningful sites of solace and recovery for traumatised soldiers? In Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway (1925), Rebecca West’s The Return of the (...)
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  22.  35
    The Romanian Emigration to the United States until the First World War. Revisiting Opportunities and Vulnerabilities.Gabriel Viorel Gardan & Marius Eppel - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (32):256-287.
    The European emigration on the other side of the Atlantic was a complex phenomenon. The areas inhabited by Romanians got acquainted to this phenomenon towards the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth. Therefore, starting with the year 1895, a certain mixture of causes led to a massive migration to America, especially of the Romanians from the rural areas. The purpose of our study is to explore the causes of the Romanian emigration across the ocean up (...)
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  23. Living together and living apart. On the interactions between mathematics and logics from the French Revolution to the First World War.Ivor Grattan-Guinness - 1988 - South African Journal of Philosophy 7 (2):73-82.
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  24.  60
    Modernism, History and the First World War.Damon Franke & Trudi Tate - 2000 - Substance 29 (1):166.
  25.  33
    Beyond the Warring States : the First World War and the redemptive critique of modernity in the work of Du Yaquan.Ady Van den Stock - 2021 - Asian Studies 9 (2):49-77.
    The intellectual impact of the First World War in China is often understood as having led to a disenchantment with the West and a discrediting of the authority of “science”, while at the same time ushering in a renewed sense of cultural as well as national “awakening”. Important developments such as the May Fourth Movement, the rise of Chinese Marxism, and the emergence of modern Confucianism have become integral parts of the narrative surrounding the effects of the “European (...)
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  26.  19
    German History since the First World War. [REVIEW]Konrad Fuchs - 1974 - Philosophy and History 7 (1):72-73.
  27.  22
    German philosophy and the First World War. By Nicolasde Warren, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2023. pp. 426. ISBN: 9781108526180. [REVIEW]Daniele De Santis - 2023 - European Journal of Philosophy 31 (4):1142-1145.
    European Journal of Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  28.  30
    Christin Pschichholz (Hg.), The First World War as a Caesura? Demographic Concepts, Population Policy, and Genocide in the Late Ottoman, Russian, and Habsburg Spheres, Berlin: Duncker&Humblot 2020, 247 S.Jutta Kirsch, Religion and Memory. The Importance of Monuments in Preserving Historical Identity, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag 2021, 272 S. [REVIEW]Bernd Lemke - 2022 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 74 (2):184-189.
  29.  22
    Martin Heidegger and the First World War: Being and Time as Funeral Oration.William H. F. Altman - 2012 - Lexington Books.
    In a new approach to a vexing problem in modern philosophy, William H. F. Altman shows that Heidegger’s decision to join the Nazis in 1933 can only be understood in the context of his complicated relationship with the Great War.
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  30.  17
    Pacifism in the United States: From the Colonial Era to the First World War.Peter Brock - 1968 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    The description for this book, Pacifism in the United States: From the Colonial Era to the First World War, will be forthcoming.
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  31.  64
    Max Scheler and Jan Patočka on the First World War.Christian Sternad - 2017 - Labyrinth: An International Journal for Philosophy, Value Theory and Sociocultural Hermeneutics 19 (1):89-106.
    The First World War was both an historical and a philosophical event. Philosophers engaged in what Kurt Flasch aptly called "the spiritual mobilization" of philosophy. Max Scheler was particularly important among these "war philosophers", given that he was the one who penned some of the most influential philosophical writings of the First World War, among them Der Genius des Krieges und der Deutsche Krieg. As I aim to show, Max Scheler's war writings were crucial for Jan (...)
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  32. Theology, Nationalism and the First World War: Christian Ethics and the Constraints of Politics.Mark D. Chapman - 1995 - Studies in Christian Ethics 8 (2):13-35.
  33.  16
    Writing down one's emotions. The conjugal relationships of French couples during the First World War.Clémentine Vidal-Naquet - 2018 - Clio 47:117-137.
    Pendant la Grande Guerre, les millions de lettres échangées entre les soldats mobilisés et leurs conjointes permettent d’observer les rapports conjugaux qui se recomposent, se nouent ou se dénouent alors. Elles constituent des sources précieuses pour étudier la place des émotions dans la fabrication de nouvelles relations à distance. Cet article interroge le genre des émotions déployées dans les relations conjugales à distance, et suit trois objectifs : questionner la façon dont s’expriment et se décrivent, en commun ou différemment, les (...)
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  34. The "good soldier" in Hašek and Rebreanu's narratives of the First World War.Charles Sabatos - 2025 - In James Griffith (ed.), Stories and Memories, Memories and Histories: A Cross-disciplinary Volume on Time, Narrativity, and Identity. Leiden: Brill.
     
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  35.  9
    Bertrand Russell and the pacifists in the First World War.Jo Vellacott - 1980 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
  36. What price loyalty?: Australian Catholics in the first world war.Jeff Kildea - 2019 - The Australasian Catholic Record 96 (1):25.
    I am grateful to the Catholic Theological College for inviting me to give the Cardinal Knox Lecture for 2018, the centenary year of the end of the First World War, and to reflect on the way the Catholic Church in Australia related to and was affected by that war, a war that began in the same year that Cardinal Knox, in whose honour we meet tonight, was born.
     
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  37.  66
    Nietzsche: Moralist or immoralist?—the verdict of the european protestant theologians in the First World War.Charles E. Bailey - 1989 - History of European Ideas 11 (1-6):799-814.
  38.  22
    A subject bibliography of the First World War.L. L. Farrar - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (6):865-866.
  39.  12
    Zionist culture and West European Jewry before the First World War.Francis R. Nicosia - 1995 - History of European Ideas 21 (1):117-119.
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  40.  44
    The Cultural Legacy of the First World War in Brazil: Roberto Simonsen and the Ideology of Development.Robert Howes - 2016 - Environment, Space, Place 8 (2):29-68.
    The article examines the impact of the First World War in Brazil through contemporary cartoons and press comment. It shows how the war disrupted trade and undermined the optimism of economic and political liberalism. The war dispelled the myth of the superiority of European civilisation, leading Brazilians to re-evaluate their own cultural heritage and their relationship with the outside world. The result was a critical nationalism concerned to identify the causes of Brazil’ problems and find new solutions (...)
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  41.  26
    “In war or in peace:” The technological promise of science following the First World War.Shaul Katzir - 2017 - Centaurus 59 (3):223-237.
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  42.  74
    International Relations in Political Thought: Texts from the Ancient Greeks to the First World War.Christopher Brown, Chris Brown, Terry Nardin & Nicholas Rengger (eds.) - 2002 - Cambridge University Press.
    This unique collection presents texts in international relations from Ancient Greece to the First World War. Major writers such as Thucydides, Augustine, Aquinas, Machiavelli, Grotius, Kant and John Stuart Mill are represented by extracts of their key works; less well-known international theorists including John of Paris, Cornelius van Bynkershoek and Friedrich List are also included. Fifty writers are anthologised in what is the largest such collection currently available. The texts, most of which are substantial extracts, are organised into (...)
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  43.  6
    : Bodies of Work: The First World War and the Transnational Making of Rehabilitation.Beth Linker - 2024 - Isis 115 (4):888-890.
  44.  16
    Anglo-German Theological Relations during the First World War.Mark D. Chapman - 2000 - Journal for the History of Modern Theology/Zeitschrift für Neuere Theologiegeschichte 7 (1):109-126.
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  45.  21
    Nation's compensation for war wounds and work incapacities. The creation of a new welfare system for physically disabled veterans and civilians of the First World War in Interwar Belgium, 1918–1928.Marisa De Picker - 2019 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 13 (4):294-307.
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  46.  29
    Forging a Multinational State: State Making in Imperial Austria from the Enlightenment to the First World War.William D. Godsey - 2018 - The European Legacy 23 (1-2):187-189.
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  47.  26
    The Romanian Emigration to the United States until the First World War. Revisiting Opportunities and Vulnerabilities.Eppel Marius & Gârdan Gabriel-Viorel - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (32):256-287.
  48.  30
    Nicolas de Warren, Thomas Vongehr (Eds.): Philosophers at the Front. Phenomenology and the First World War.Peter Andras Varga - 2020 - Husserl Studies 36 (1):95-101.
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  49.  31
    The Modern Middle East: A Political History since the First World War. By Mehran Kamrava.Roger Owen - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (2):250-251.
  50.  15
    Wartime Pamphlets, Anti-English Metaphors, and the Intensification of Antidemocratic Discourse in Germany after the First World War.Timo Pankakoski - 2021 - Journal of the History of Ideas 82 (2):279-304.
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