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A B C D E F
G H I J K L
M N O P Q R
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 The Great War 1914-1918, and Associated Conflicts
   Medical
     Shell Shock and Other Psychiatric Conditions



RCC7996


Psychological Trauma and the Legacies of the First World War

by Peter Leese  Jason Crouthamel  

ISBN
9783319815237

Purchase Price
£19.99 (new)

Date Purchased
October 31, 2020

Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan (2017, London)

Notes
This is a collection of 12 essays by various academics on the subject of psychological trauma during the Great War. The sensible thing for us is to list these essays, as follows: Part 1: Battles Over Representations and Perceptions of Traumatized Men 1. "Introduction" by Jason Crouthamel & Peter Leese 2. "Losing Face: Trauma and Maxillofacial Injury in the First World War"; by Fiona Reid, of the History Department at the University of South Wales 3. "Screening Silent Resistance: Male Hysteria in First World War Medical Cinematography"; by Julia B Kohne, a Research Scholar at Humboldt University, Berlin and a Privatdozentin for Contemporary and Cultural History and Media Studies at the University of Vienna 4. "Always Had a Pronouncedly Psychopathic Predisposition: The Significance of Class and Rank in First World War German Discourse"; by Gundula Gahlen, a Research Scholar at the Freie Universitaat, Berlin Part II: Traumatized Civilians in the Wake of the Great War 5. "Violence, Trauma and Memory in Ireland: The Psychological Impact of War and Revolution in a Liminal Society 1916 - 1923"; by Justin D Stover, Assistant Professor of Transnational History at Idaho State University 6. "Gender, Memory and the Great War: The Politics of War Victimhood in Interwar Germany"; by Silke Fehlemann, a Research Associate at the Heinrich Heine University of Dusseldorf in the field of history of psychiatry, and Nils Hoffelbein, Assistant Professor at the Goethe Universitaat in Franfurt am Main 7. "Subjectivities in the Aftermath: Children of Disabled Soldiers in Britain after the Great War"; by Michael Roper, Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex 8. "Entrenched From Life: The Impossible Reintegration of Traumatized French Veterans of the Great War"; by Marie Derrien, Associate Member of the Rhone-Alpes Laboratory of Historical Research in Lyons Part III: Traumatized Medical Cultures 9. "Making Sense of War Neurosis in Yugoslavia"; by Heike Karge, Assistant Professor at Regensburg University 10. "Everything Ruined, Which Seemed Most Stable in the World. The German Medical Profession, the First World War, and the Road to the Third Reich"; by Livia Prull, Lecturer in the Medical Faculty at the University of Mainz 11. "Violence and Starvation in First World War Psychiatry: Origins of the National Socialist Euthanasia Program"; by Philip Raub, Research Associate at the Institute for the History and Ethics of Medicine, University of Erlangen, Nuremberg Part IV: A Code on Trauma 12. "Toward a Global History of Trauma"; by Mark S Micale, Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign