Fr. 30.90

Broken Nation - Australians in the Great War

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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The Great War is, for many Australians, the event that defined that nation. The larrikin diggers, trench warfare, and the landing at Gallipoli have become the stuff of the Anzac 'legend'. But it was also a war fought by the families at home. Their resilience in the face of hardship, their stoic acceptance of enormous casualty lists and their belief that their cause was just, made the war effort possible.

Broken Nation is the first book to bring together all the dimensions of World War One. Combining deep scholarship with powerful storytelling, Joan Beaumont brings the war years to life: from the well-known battles at Gallipoli, Pozieres, Fromelles and Villers-Bretonneux, to the lesser known battles in Europe and the Middle East; from the ferocious debates over conscription to the disillusioning Paris peace conference and the devastating 'Spanish' flu the soldiers brought home. We witness the fear and courage of tens of thousands of soldiers, grapple with the strategic nightmares confronting the commanders, and come to understand the impact on Australians at home and at the front of death on an unprecedented scale.

A century after the Great War, Broken Nation brings lucid insight to the dramatic events, mass grief and political turmoil that makes the memory of this terrible war central to Australia's history.

List of contents

List of illustrations..List of tables and figures..List of maps..Preface..Acknowledgements..Abbreviations and acronyms..Prologue: Joe Russell's war..1. 1914: Going to war..2. 1915: Gallipoli and mobilisation at home..3. 1916: War of a different kind..4. 1917: The worst year..5. 1918: Crisis and victory..6. 1919: Peace and memory..Appendix 1: Organisation of the 1st AIF, 1918..Appendix 2: AIF enlistments by month, 1915-18..Notes..Bibliography..Index

About the author

Joan Beaumont is an internationally recognised historian of Australia in the two world wars, the history of prisoners of war and the memory and heritage of war. She is Professor of History at the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Australian National University, and has published several books about World Wars One and Two.

Summary

The Australian experience of war in all its complexity - from the homefront as well as the battlefront - as the men and women who experienced it chose to understand and remember it.

Foreword

The Australian experience of war in all its complexity - from the homefront as well as the battlefront - as the men and women who experienced it chose to understand and remember it.

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