Houghton Mifflin, 396 pp., $24.95
Bloomsbury, 406 pp., £14.95 (paper)
Columbia University Press, 468 pp., $14.00 (paper)
Reimar Hobbing, 414 pp., DM48
University of North Carolina Press, 660 pp., $42.50
Each of the two World Wars not only changed the political, social, economic, and ideological structure of the world in a very practical way; they also left behind symbols that have continued to haunt us. These may be place names—Verdun, Gallipoli, Auschwitz, Hiroshima; they may be types—the Unknown Soldier, poilu or Tommy, the Aviator, the War Profiteer ('hard-faced men who looked as if they have done very well out of the war'), the Collaborator or 'Quisling,' the Resistance Hero. The wars also seemed to represent symbolic values, both positive and negative—national solidarity ('the Spirit of 1914'), courage, comradeship, sacrifice, but also mass destruction, often for futile ends.
Review, 4696 words
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