Epilogue: Homegirls Then and Now, from the Home Front to the Front Line

2020 ◽  
pp. 137-148
Keyword(s):  
1992 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZAHAVA SOLOMON ◽  
MARK WAYSMAN ◽  
GABY LEVY ◽  
BATIA FRIED ◽  
MARIO MIKULINCER ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID ANDERSON

Among wartime and postwar Americans, North and South, an appetite to narrate their experiences of preserving Union or achieving state sovereignty is reflected in their many accounts of the coming of the Civil War, its fighting, and its aftermath. Private letters from the home front and front line were regularly written and received; despite shortages of paper and ink, diaries and journals were diligently kept, recording experiences at both local and state levels; and memoirs and reminiscences, usually written many years after the events they describe, were produced for regional, national, and even international literary markets. These eyewitness accounts from a wide range of historical actors offer scholars, students, and general readers a remarkably detailed, intimate, and valuable glimpse of lived experience during four years of fighting that shaped a nation.


Author(s):  
M. SH. Knopov ◽  
V. K. Taranukha

Success in the treatment of wounded and patients in the medical and sanitary battalions, army and front-line base hospitals as well as on the home front was secured by realization of the system of step-by-step treatment with evacuation when indicated. Creation and application of that principally new advanced system of treatment-and-evacuation provision for combat operations was the great achievement of native public health and military medical service. Studies of many talented scientists in the field of treatment of gunshot wound, penetrating wounds, gunshot fractures of the extremities, wound complications as well as elaboration of diagnostic and treatment methods for wounded played an important role in the creation of the system for rendering adequate medical care.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 620-638
Author(s):  
Alim Tetuev

The article examines the memory of the Great Patriotic War in letters, memoirs and literary sources of front-line soldiers and workers of the rear of Kabardino-Balkaria. The state of historiography and sources of the studied problem is analyzed, its relevance is substantiated. The experience of party political and propaganda work of the Main Political Administration of the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army and local party and Soviet bodies for educating the Red Army and home front workers in the spirit of Soviet patriotism, national unity, hatred of the German occupiers and belief in victory will be summarized.  The letters and addresses of front-line soldiers to relatives and friends, home front workers, and local party and Soviet authorities were identified and investigated.  The letters and appeals of relatives and friends, home front workers, and local party and Soviet government bodies to front-line soldiers are examined. The reflection of war in the literary sources of the front-line soldiers, which are dedicated to the people of the front and rear, is considered. The analysis of the problem under study showed that the tasks of rallying and mobilizing all forces to achieve victory were characteristic of the consciousness of front-line soldiers and rear in an extreme situation.    


2002 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 361-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
M O'Riordan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Admink Admink

Системно відтворено розвиток церковної музики (дзвоніння, богослужбовий спів, гра органа) у контексті мистецького життя Західно-Української Народної Республіки (ЗУНР). Інтерпретація матеріалів утверджує герменевтичне вивчення музики й анропологічний підхід в її студіях. Розвій мистецтва зумовили духовне піднесення українців, боротьба за свою державу на фронті й у тилу, сплеск виявів побожності серед людей, прагнення випросити благовоління для оборонних змагань. Богослужіння, чин поховання природно супроводжувалися відповідним співосупроводом, дзвоніннями, грою органа.Ключові слова: Західно-Українська Народна Республіка, церковна музика, богослужбові співи, дзвоніння, орган, священник, капелан, ритуал. The development of church music (bell-ringing, liturgical singing, organ playing) has been systematically researched in the context of the artistic life of the West Ukrainian People’s Republic (WUPR). The interpretation of the, material confirms the hermeneutical study of music and the anthropological approach in its studies. The development of art caused the special spiritual uplift of the Ukrainians, the struggle for their state at the front line and at the home front,a burst of manifestations of piety among people, the desire to seek God’s favor for the people’s fight. The liturgy, the act of burial were naturally accompanied by appropriate singing, bell-ringing, and organ playing.Key words: Westukrainian People’s Republic, church music, liturgical chants, bell-ringing, organ, priest, chaplain, ritual.


2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 84-90
Author(s):  
Oleg I. Mariskin

Introduction. The article explores the daily life of the rear region during the Great Patriotic War of 1941–1945. The workers of the Atyashevsky district of the Mordovian ASSR, like all Soviet people, stood up for the Fatherland. The Great Patriotic war made fundamental changes in the way of life of the home front. Women, children, and old men who replaced men gone to the front often worked around the clock and slept in their workplaces. Results and Discussion. During the war, many types of agricultural work were performed manually. In the rear, food shortages caused difficulties in supplying the population with food. It was no better to provide food for the families of front-line soldiers. Collective farmers and sole peasants began to pay personal land, since then the main source of food. The villagers grew many of the crops that were previously produced by farmers on arable land, but in much smaller amounts. Workers of the district led to the construction of fortifications – the Sursky defense line. Conclusion. The war is leaving the past, its participants, soldiers’ widows and mothers are still less alive, but the feat accomplished by the soldiers and workers of the rear during the years of the Great Patriotic War is immortal.


1993 ◽  
pp. 103-129
Author(s):  
Zahava Solomon
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 90-93
Author(s):  
M. SH Knopov ◽  
V. K Taranukha

Success in the treatment of wounded and patients in the medical and sanitary battalions, army and front-line base hospitals as well as on the home front was secured by realization of the system of step-by-step treatment with evacuation when indicated. Creation and application of that principally new advanced system of treatment-and-evacuation provision for combat operations was the great achievement of native public health and military medical service. Studies of many talented scientists in the field of treatment of gunshot wound, penetrating wounds, gunshot fractures of the extremities, wound complications as well as elaboration of diagnostic and treatment methods for wounded played an important role in the creation of the system for rendering adequate medical care.


2021 ◽  
pp. 153-178
Author(s):  
Lynda Mugglestone

This chapter focusses on the language of total war, and its consequences, in Britain. Total war is marked by the explicit renegotiation of the boundaries of conflict, alongside the participants it claims; as contemporary comment stressed, the people were, in effect, now to be the new front line. For Clark, the language of aerial attack, and domestic response, was, by extension, to be another area of marked lexical and semantic shift, whether in the rise of distinctive collocations such as Zeppelin nights and Zeppelin barometers, or in the domestic diction of gas warfare (and gas marks) alongside the emergence of dug-outs on the Home Front. Time itself, via British Summer Time or artificial time, changed too, as – at least intentionally — did the language of key British institutions such as ‘buying a round’.


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