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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Mensch und Volk im Kriegserlebnis dargestellt an typischen deutschen dichtungen aus der Zeit des Weltkrieges

Hoffmann, Helmut, January 1937 (has links)
The author's inaugural dissertation, Hamburg. / "Werke der betrachteten Kriegsliteratur": p. [82]. "Schrifttum": p. [80]-81. "Werke der betrachteten Kriegsliteratur": p. [82].
2

Mensch und Volk im Kriegserlebnis dargestellt an typischen deutschen dichtungen aus der Zeit des Weltkrieges

Hoffmann, Helmut, January 1937 (has links)
The author's inaugural dissertation, Hamburg. / "Werke der betrachteten Kriegsliteratur": p. [82]. "Schrifttum": p. [80]-81. "Werke der betrachteten Kriegsliteratur": p. [82].
3

The presentation of World War I in certain American novels

Marlow, Minerva Shelton. January 1947 (has links)
LD2668 .T4 1947 M37 / Master of Science
4

Modernism and the generation of 1914 in Spain, 1914-1918 /

Díaz-Cristóbal, Marina B. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Tufts University, 2003. / Adviser: Jose Alvarez-Junco. Submitted to the Dept. of History. Includes bibliographical references. Access restricted to members of the Tufts University community. Also available via the World Wide Web;
5

A conflict of perception : medical aspects of German First World War literature : the presentation of the medical professions and of medical conditions in contemporary and Weimar prose relating to the First World War

Sieben, Ingolf January 1995 (has links)
There is a divergence of views in German First World War literature concerning the presentation of medical aspects and nursing experiences. Although all accounts of the war claim implicitly to present the truth about a section of, or even the whole of, the war, be they diaries, letters or war fiction, variations arise due to the individual attitude, perspective and intention of each author. This thesis examines a range of different types of fictional and non-fictional war literature: diaries, letters, reports, narratives and novels written by or about participants during or after the war, taking due account of the precise relationship to the experience, the intent of the writers and the context of their accounts. Some of these are based on personal experience and provide an imnediate impression of the war. Some use personal experience, but not specific historical details, to look at the war in retrospect, conditioned by the (additional) medical knowledge of the late 1920s. Others blend fictional and historical characters and events. Although the standpoint of the individual ordinary soldier and sailor, or officer, predominates in writings of this kind, writings both by and about women and other non-combatants involved in the war have been included. German material is compared with American, British and French accounts wherever possible and practicable. A preliminary section (chapters 2+3) provides the reader with a detailed and necessary historical overview of the organization of the German lieeressanialtswesen. between 1914 and 1918, followed by an examination of the discrepancy between the historical experience and perception of the Lazarett in the German literary context. The second part of the work (chapters 4-6) examines descriptions and perceptions of specific medical aspects of the war from the point of view of those immediately involved in the Yermuncletenliirgarge: surgeons and medical practitioners, paramedical orderlies and stretcher-bearers as well as nurses. The largest part (chapters 7-12) examines the medical effects of the war as perceived in different literary and non-literary contexts, ranging from straightforward wounds, shell-shock and other psychological phenomena, to the effects of poison gas and chemical warfare, venereal diseases, self-inflicted wounds and the medical implications of trench warfare, followed by an analysis of the motif of 'war as disease'.
6

"Fictions of crisis": a comparative study of some aspects of fictions by D. H. Lawrence and Thomas Mann.

January 2000 (has links)
Young Ada. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 134-139). / Abstracts in English and Chinese. / Abstract --- p.i / 摘要 --- p.iii / Acknowledgments --- p.v / Introduction / "Crisis Unveiled: ""All that is Positive Melts Away""" --- p.1 / Chapter Chapter I --- "Crisis in Interpersonal and Intrapsychic Realms: and ""England, My England""" --- p.17 / Chapter Chapter II --- Crisis in Interpersonal and Intrapsychic Realms: Desire and its Perversions in Death in Venice and The Magic Mountain --- p.37 / Chapter Chapter III --- "Crisis at the Societal Level: in Women in Love and ""England, My England""" --- p.64 / Chapter Chapter IV --- Crisis at the Societal Level: From the Corrosions of Meaning in Life to the Dislocations of Societal Order in Death in Venice and The Magic Mountain --- p.94 / Coda / Crisis (Un)ended: The Great War and its Aftermath --- p.122 / Notes --- p.129 / Works Cited --- p.134

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