This volume examines political and cultural mobilisation in the face of industrialised mass death during the First World War. Comparing Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Austria-Hungary, it generates arguments on mobilisation and 'total war' which have wider relevance. It explores 'national ideals' which cast the war as a crusade, the inclusive 'self-mobilisation' of sectional identities and private organisations behind national efforts, and the exclusion of suspect groups (the 'enemy within') from the mobilisation process. It also highlights the importance, and difficulty, of assessing the limits of mobilisation as well as the differing capacities of the state to sustain it, factors related to prior degrees of national integration and political legitimacy. Mobilisation in this sense was an important factor which determined the outcome and legacy of the war.
Comparative essays on the political and cultural 'mobilization' of populations during the First World War.Reviews'... this is a very good collection of essays which makes a substantial contribution to understanding the First World War.' Labour History Review
Book InformationISBN 9780521522663
Author John HorneFormat Paperback
Page Count 312
Imprint Cambridge University PressPublisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 460g
Dimensions(mm) 233mm * 153mm * 20mm