Masculinity, Men's Bodies and the Great War
Joanna Bourke on how new ways of looking at masculinity are revising our view of men’s experience in the First World War.
Joanna Bourke on how new ways of looking at masculinity are revising our view of men’s experience in the First World War.
Richard Wilkinson explains what went wrong in Anglo-German relations before the First World War.
Richard Wilkinson argues that, for all his faults, a case can be made for the aloof aristocrat at the Foreign Office in 1900-1905.
David Rooney describes the extraordinary exploits of Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck, the German soldier who kept the Allies tied down in Africa throughout the Great War.
Mark Mazower looks back to the much maligned Versailles Treaty and finds we still live in the continent it created.
October 1st, 1918
Graham Darby provides a timely reconsideration of why the conflict went on for so long and why the Central Powers lost.
Christopher Ray queries the accepted pictures of a reluctant victim of forces beyond her control.
Derek Aldcroft argues that the statesmen of 1919 failed to act in the interests of Europe as a whole.
Robert Pearce distributes a survival kit for the most hazardous causation question of all.