'At Duty's Call': A Study in Obsolete Patriotism by W. J. Reader (Paperback, 1988)

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The Victorian private solider was a despised figure. A working man had to be desperate indeed to take the Queen's shilling. Yet in the first sixteen months of the Great War two and a half million men from the UK and many more from the empire, flocked to the colours - without any form of legal compulsion. There had never been a volunteer army like it. What was in the air of England in the generation or so before 1914 to bring about such collective exultation? How did it come about that, in a society which - in oft-proclaimed contrast to Germany - rejected conscription and prided itself on having no taint of militarism, men could be induced to volunteer in such numbers? The nation's general state of mind, system of values and set of attitudes derived largely from the upper middle class, which had emerged and become dominant during the nineteenth century. The book examines the phenomenon of 1914 and the views held by people of that class, since it was under their leadership that the country went to war. -- .

Product Identifiers

PublisherManchester University Press
ISBN-139780719097539
eBay Product ID (ePID)213320545

Product Key Features

Number of Pages176 Pages
Publication Name'at Duty's Call': a Study in Obsolete Patriotism
LanguageEnglish
SubjectHistory
Publication Year1988
TypeTextbook
AuthorW. J. Reader
SeriesStudies in Imperialism
FormatPaperback

Dimensions

Item Height234 mm
Item Width156 mm

Additional Product Features

Country/Region of ManufactureUnited Kingdom
Title_AuthorW. J. Reader

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