1st Edition

Communication and the First World War

Edited By John Griffiths Copyright 2020
    324 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    324 Pages 21 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Despite the voluminous historical literature on the First World War, a volume devoted to the theme of communication has yet to appear. From the communication of war aims and objectives to the communication of war call-up and war experience and knowledge, this volume fills the gap in the market, including the work of both established and newly emerging scholars working on the First World War across the globe. The volume includes chapters that focus on the experience of belligerent and also neutral powers, thus providing a genuinely representative dimension to the subject.

    List of illustrations

    List of contributors

    Foreword or series editor introduction

    Introduction: perspectives on communication and the study of the First World War

    JOHN GRIFFITHS

    1 Writing a war of words: negotiating trench warfare in Andrew Clark’s ‘English Words in War-Time’

    LYNDA MUGGLESTONE

    2 British discourse, representations and conceptualisations of the Armenian genocide during the First World War

    PETER MORGAN

    3 ‘Spreading fields of victory’?: the reporting of Gallipoli, Jutland and the Somme in The War Illustrated

    JONATHAN RAYNER

    4 Fake news or an education in war? Communicating war aims to the British public in its early phases: The Oxford Pamphlets 1914–1915

    JOHN GRIFFITHS

    5 Desperately seeking the centre: critiques of U.S. propaganda posters during a ‘highbrow’ versus ‘lowbrow’ age

    HARLEN MAKEMSON

    6 The future of Alsace: the French case to the Americans

    CHRISTOPHER FISCHER

    7 Women’s war: engaging Canadian housewives in the food economy in 1914–1918

    MOURAD DJEBABLA

    8 ‘Continuing the mission’: the First World War and the roots of Red Scare violence, 1919–1921

    MATTHEW KOVAC

    9 International propaganda in Spain during the First World War: state of the art and new contributions

    MARTA GARCÍA CABRERA

    10 Great expectations: the latency of the First World War in Republican Portugal, 1914–1916

    JOSÉ MIGUEL SARDICA

    11 The role of the Dundee press and public propaganda in shaping public opinion and home front support for the war effort in Scotland, 1914–1918

    WILLIAM KENEFICK

    12 War-time and post-war medical communication: the role of the U.S. Army Medical Library

    JEFFREY S. REZNICK AND KENNETH M. KOYLE

    Index

    Biography

    John Griffiths is Senior Lecturer in History at Massey University, New Zealand. He is author of Imperial Culture in Antipodean Cities 1880-1939 (2014); and co-editor with Andrew Brown of The Citizen: Past and Present (2017). He is one of the Managing Editors of the journal Britain and the World.