A World at War, 1911-1949

Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Notes on Contributors

Introduction
Catriona Pennell and Filipe Ribeiro de Meneses

Part 1: Mobilizing Minds

1 Cultural Mobilization: Henry Moore and the Two World Wars
J.M. Winter
2 Petitioning the World: Intellectuals and Cultural Mobilization in the Great War
Tomás Irish
3 ‘German Servicemen See Europe’: Cultural Mobilization of Troops on the Aegean ‘Quiet Front’
Anthony McElligott

Part 2: Soldiering: Experience and Representation

4 The Sharp End: Witnessing, Perpetrating, and Suffering Violence in 20th Century Wars
Alan Kramer
5 The Isle of Saints and Soldiers: The Evolving Image of the Irish Combatant, 1914–1918
Heather Jones and Edward Madigan
6 “For What and For Whom Were We Fighting?” Red Army Soldiers, Combat Motivation and Survival Strategies on the Eastern Front in the Second World War
Robert Dale

Part 3: Civilians under Fire

7 Against Civilians: Atrocities, Extermination, and Genocide from One World War to the Other, 1942/44–1914
Annette Becker
8 Mobility and Immobility in Civilian Experiences of the First World War: Refugees and Occupied Populations in Europe, 1914–1918
Alex Dowdall
9 Occupation, Memory, and Cultural Demobilization: Paris as Case Study
Michael S. Neiberg

Part 4: Victory and Defeat

10 Post-wars and Violence: Europe between 1918 and the Later 1940s
Robert Gerwarth
11 A Croat Iliad? Miroslav Krleža and the Refractions of Victory and Defeat in Central Europe
John Paul Newman
12 “The Worst Disaster”: British Reactions to the Fall of Singapore
Daniel Todman
A World at War: 1911–1949: Conclusion
John Horne

Bibliography
Index