1. Introduction: Death’s carnival: The myriad legacies of 1917; Maartje Abbenhuis.- 2. War and anxiety in 1917; Jay Winter.- 3. American entry into the First World War as an historiographical problem; Michael S. Neiberg.- 4. The Maori war effort at home and abroad in 1917; Monty Soutar.- 5. India’s silver bullets: War loans and war propaganda, 1917-18; Radhika Singha.- 6. Artists and writers between tragedy and camouflage; Annette Becker.- 7. From Cursed Days to ‘Sunstroke’: The authenticity of Ivan Bunin’s recollections of the Bolshevik revolution in the 1920s; Galina Rylkova.- 8.Temporary sahibs: Terriers in India in 1917; Peter Stanley.- 9. The German-Ottoman alliance, the Caucasus, and the impact of the Russian revolutions of 1917; Thomas Schmutz.- 10. New Zealand and ‘the catastrophic year 1917’; Glyn Harper.- 11.1917 in Flanders fields: The seeds for the commemorative warlandscape in Belgian Flanders; Piet Chielens.- 12. Passchendaele: Remembering and forgetting in New Zealand; Jock Phillips.- 13. The forgotten break in history: The First World War and the year 1917 in German commemorative culture; Gorch Pieken.- Index.
Maartje Abbenhuis is Associate Professor in Modern European History
at The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Neill Atkinson is Chief Historian at Manatu Taonga Ministry
for Culture and Heritage, New Zealand.
Kingsley Baird is Professor of Fine Arts at Massey University, New
Zealand.
Gail Romano is Associate Curator at the Auckland War Memorial
Museum, New Zealand.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |