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Jay Winter

    Dunera Lives: Profiles
    The Cultural History of War in the Twentieth Century and After
    The Great War in History
    René Cassin and Human Rights
    The Cambridge history of the First world war. Volume III Civil Society
    The Day the Great War Ended, 24 July 1923
    • 4,0(2)Tarief

      The peace conference at Lausanne in 1923 marked the conclusion of the Great War, but it prioritized peace over justice, as explored by Jay Winter. He delves into the outcomes of the Treaty and its implications, highlighting how the decisions made during the conference sowed the seeds for future global conflict, ultimately leading to World War II in 1939. Winter's narrative sheds light on the complex interplay between diplomacy and the unresolved tensions that followed the war.

      The Day the Great War Ended, 24 July 1923
    • The Cambridge History of the First World War is a comprehensive, three-volume work which provides an authoritative account of the military, political, social, economic, and cultural history of the Great War. Reflecting the very latest research in the field, the volumes provide a comprehensive guide to the course of the war and of how the dynamics of conflict unfolded throughout the world. Volume I surveys the military history showing the brutal realities of a global war among industrialized powers. Volumes II and III explore the social, economic, cultural, and political challenges that the war presented to politicians, industrialists, soldiers, and civilians

      The Cambridge history of the First world war. Volume III Civil Society
    • René Cassin and Human Rights

      • 402bladzijden
      • 15 uur lezen
      3,0(1)Tarief

      Focusing on the life of a pivotal figure in the human rights movement, this book offers a fresh perspective on the history of human rights. Through the lens of this individual's experiences and contributions, it delves into the evolution of human rights, highlighting significant events and ideas that shaped the movement. The biography not only chronicles personal milestones but also contextualizes broader societal changes, providing readers with a deeper understanding of the ongoing struggle for human rights.

      René Cassin and Human Rights
    • The Great War in History

      • 300bladzijden
      • 11 uur lezen
      3,0(1)Tarief

      This revised and updated edition provides the first survey of historical interpretations of the Great War from 1914 to 2020. It demonstrates how the history of the Great War has now gone global, and how the internet revolution has affected the way we understand the conflict.

      The Great War in History
    • Dunera Lives: Profiles

      • 576bladzijden
      • 21 uur lezen

      This second volume of Dunera Lives presents the voices, faces, and lives of 20 people, who, together with nearly 3000 other internees from Britain and Singapore, landed in Australia in 1940. All over the world there were Dunera Lives, those of men and women who passed through the upheavals of the Second World War and survived to tell the tale. Here are some of their stories.

      Dunera Lives: Profiles
    • Introduction; Part I. Vectors of Memory: 1. Configuring war; 2. Photographing war; 3. Filming war; 4. Writing war; Part II. Frameworks of Memory: 5. Memory and the sacred: martyrdom in the twentieth century and beyond; 6. The geometry of memory: horizontality and war memorials in the twentieth century and after; 7. War beyond words: shell shock, silence, and memories of war; Conclusion.

      War beyond Words
    • As long as I can remember, the only thing that fills my brain are words, and ever since starting school and falling in love with rhyming iambic pentameters, I have been writing "old-fashioned" poetry! This collection has been garnered and put together from hand-drafted papers and (my sister having taught me how to type so that she could read my scrawl!) from a life's collection of typed manuscripts.

      My Life in Verse
    • A historical thriller about the ending of apartheid

      The Young Lions
    • La prima guerra mondiale fu una carneficina inaudita: i sopravvissuti, tanto i reduci quanto chi era rimasto a casa, dovettero fare i conti con l'accaduto, elaborare il lutto. Ai molti e differenti modi, pubblici e privati, di questo lutto è dedicato il libro, nella convinzione che l'esigenza di trovare un senso alla guerra e alla sofferenza subita non generi soltanto una "memoria moderna", quanto un ritorno a forme culturali arcaiche.

      Il lutto e la memoria