The Universite du Littoral Cote d’Opale (France) in collaboration with the
In Flanders Fields museum, Belgium is organizing
an international conference on Chinese workers in the First World War, see:
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The Universite du Littoral Cote d’Opale (France) in collaboration with the
In Flanders Fields museum, Belgium is organizing
an international conference on Chinese workers in the First World War, see:
First World War Studies, the journal of the International Society of First World War Studies, is pleased to announce its first call for submissions. The premier issue will appear in March 2010.
First World War Studies is a peer-reviewed, scholarly journal that seeks to publish articles that explore comparative, trans-national, and multi-disciplinary strengths evident in the International Society for First World War Studies and pursue as its guiding principles the same intellectual assets. As the Society draws its strengths from graduate students to more experienced scholars, the journal is equally committed to a collegial academic forum open to any scholar irrespective of degree, academic seniority, or disciplinary affiliation. The journal approaches the subject of the First World War without chronological, geographic, or topical constraints. It embraces not merely the period associated with the years between 1914 and 1918, but seeks to include the diplomatic, political, social, cultural, and military complexities evident before, during, and most certainly after the cessation of hostilities. The journal will contribute significantly to the ongoing debates concerning the origins and causes, conduct, and implications of the First World War.
First World War Studies is the only scholarly journal devoted to this extraordinary and controversial conflict and maintains an Editorial Board that consists of many internationally recognized scholars.
Articles should be no more than 8,000 words and conform to Chicago referencing, including a 500 word abstract, 5-7 keys words, and full author contact information. As we approach the 100th anniversary of the start of the war, the journal will eagerly consider “special issues” that thematically or topically focus upon any aspect of its origins, prosecution, and legacy.
First World War Studies also seeks book reviewers. All who are interested are invited to send short emails to the editor listing their area of expertise. Normally books will be assigned to review, although scholars interested in writing review essays are encouraged to submit proposals. Please bring to our attention new titles in any language appropriate to the scope of the journal.
Submissions should be sent as attachments in word format and address all queries to the Editor, Dr. Steven Sabol, at sosabol@uncc.edu.
Un dossier de la Vie des Idées où le débat historiographique français se poursuit…
http://www.laviedesidees.fr/+-La-Grande-Guerre-toujours-presente-+.html
À propos de : S. Audoin-Rouzeau & G. Krumeich, Cicatrices, Tallandier.
par Élise Julien
2. La guerre des profiteurs et des embusqués
À propos de : F. Bouloc, Les Profiteurs de guerre 1914-1918, Complexe & C. Ridel, Les Embusqués, Armand Colin.
par Romain Ducoulombier
3. Le champ de bataille des historiens
par Jean-Yves Le Naour
4. 1914-1918 : retrouver la controverse
par François Buton & André Loez & Nicolas Mariot & Philippe Olivera
5. De retour des tranchées
À propos de : C. Prochasson, 14-18. Retours d’expériences, Tallandier.
par Pierre Purseigle
par Stéphane Audoin-Rouzeau
Call for Papers
‘Other Combatants, Other Fronts: Competing Histories of the First World War’
The 5th Conference of the International Society for First World War Studies
The Imperial War Museum
London, UK
10th to 12th September 2009
We would like to call your attention to the Fifth Conference of the International Society for First World War Studies, which will take place in association with the Imperial War Museum and War Studies, King’s College, London in September 2009. Since 2001, the International Society for First World War Studies has held successful conferences in Lyon, Oxford, Dublin and Washington DC.
In line with previous conferences the Society seeks emerging and innovative research on all aspects of the First World War. We would encourage applications from a variety of disciplines, including literature, art, archaeology, philosophy and music, as well as from historians.
The historiography of the Western Front from the British, French and German perspectives is well developed. Whilst we welcome the latest research in these veins the conference seeks to juxtapose it with work emphasising less familiar ‘fronts’ – ‘Other Combatants’ and ‘Other Fronts’. In so doing we will expand and enhance our understanding of the truly global nature of this conflict. As with all the Society’s previous conferences a publication based on conference papers is anticipated. Continue reading "London 2009 Call for Papers now online" »
The Blitz of 1918
Telegraph.co.uk – United Kingdom
Baldwin’s pessimism was based on a crucial – but often overlooked – episode in the First World War that was to influence decisively the course of the Second …
Art that brings life to the Leas
Financial Times – London,England,UK
Christian Boltanski picked up on the same themes as Wallinger, digging up letters from locals from First World War soldiers and having them recorded and …
Senate to honor last living US vet of WWI
CNN – USA
WASHINGTON (CNN) — The US Senate will honor the last living American World War I veteran Wednesday, 107-year-old Frank Woodruff Buckles. …
Belfast Mayor calls for civic remembrance
BBC News – UK
Tom Hartley, Sinn Fein, said that he would lay a wreath at the city hall on 1 July in memory of the Somme fallen of WWI, but not at the military ceremony. … Continue reading "The First World War in the news – June 2008" »
Kluge Fellow, Geert Buelens, presents Remember Belgium – Poetry as Propaganda during the First World War, 17 July at 12:00 in Whittall Pavilion, Thomas Jefferson Building,
Library of Congress. This talk will address the use of poetry as propaganda, using First World War poems about Belgium by poets …
Contact: lckluge@loc.gov
URL: www.loc.gov/loc/kluge//news/news2008.html#buelens
Congratulations to our friend and Society stalwart, Mike Neiberg, recognized as a Top Young Historian by the History News Network. Read the full story here:
Fromelles dig finds WWI grave site
ABC Online – Australia
An excavation in north-eastern France has uncovered a mass grave where up to 170 Australian soldiers were buried in World War I. On the night of July 19, …
Dig starts at WWI grave site
ABC Online – Australia
Archaeological experts in France will today begin digging at a World War I site in the country’s north to find the remains of 400 Australian and British …
Memorial Day, the Great War, and America’s Last Surviving World …
Such coverage in the United States has been thin at best, and echoes of the First World War remain distant – as they have traditionally been – in American public memory. How the centenary anniversary of the war will play out in the …
WWI, the forgotten war
Philadelphia Daily News – Philadelphia,PA,USA
Americans should rediscover and try to learn more about World War I. Unlike WWII, Vietnam and Korean war vet, the WWI veterans are no longer able to speak …
Last Known Surviving US WWI Vet To Visit KC
KMBC.com – Kansas City,MO,USA
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The last known surviving American veteran of World War I will visit the Liberty Memorial over the Memorial Day weekend. …
Christopher Nevinson: He Gained a Fortune but He Gave a Son (1918)
Independent – London,England,UK
He Gained a Fortune but He Gave a Son was painted at the end of the First World War. It depicts a sad and hatless plutocrat. The title tells the story. …
Football stopped slaughter
Manchester Online – Manchester,UK
IT is an incident that, amid all the horror of the First World War trenches, still lifts the spirits with its simple and touching humanity. …
THE IRISH AND WAR
TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN
14-15 NOVEMBER 2008
THE IRISH AND WAR
TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN
14-15 NOVEMBER 2008
Storytellers and writers in all genres have represented a variety of Irish responses to the military and conflict at home and abroad; soldiers have used both letters and memoirs to record their opinion of military life; filmmakers and artists have provided visual explorations of the war experience. What do these reports and representations reveal about Irish attitudes to the military and warfare? What do they tell us about Ireland’s relationship with other countries, and the role that warfare played in helping to shape notions of personal, regional and national identity?
This conference aims to address such questions, by gathering together scholars from various disciplines to explore how the Irish have represented war from the late 1600s to the present. Topics may include but are not limited to: accounts of warfare by participants and witnesses; fictional representations of soldiers and warfare; neutrality and resistance to war; war journalism; propaganda; war poets and poetry; cinematic representations of the fighting Irish.
Please send proposals of no more than 250 words to the organizers, Dr. Anne Markey, Dr. Sharon Murphy, and Dr. David Murphy, at theirishandwar@tcd.ie by 3oth June.
KEYNOTE SPEAKER:
Dr. Mark Rawlinson (Leicester)
This conference is being generously sponsored by the School of English, Trinity College
Enduring the Great War. Combat, Morale and Collapse in the German and British Armies, 1914–1918
by Alexander Watson, University of Cambridge
Published by Cambridge University Press
Description
An innovative comparative history of how German and British soldiers endured the horror of the First World War. Unlike existing literature, which emphasises the strength of societies or military institutions, this study argues that at the heart of armies’ robustness lay natural human resilience. Continue reading "New publication by society member Alex Watson" »