the Battle of Somme
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Beschrijving
Bol
John Buchan's The Battle of the Somme is a contemporary account of one of the First World War's defining offensives, tracing the campaign's strategic aims, military phases, and moral significance for Britain and its allies. Written in Buchan's lucid, controlled prose, it combines narrative history with patriotic interpretation, emphasizing endurance, coordination, and sacrifice. Its literary context is wartime public history: a work shaped by immediacy, official information, and the need to render industrial warfare intelligible to civilian readers. Buchan, the Scottish novelist, historian, barrister, and public servant best known for The Thirty-Nine Steps, was deeply embedded in Britain's wartime culture of information. His work on Nelson's History of the War and later service in propaganda and government gave him access to military narratives and a keen sense of how history could sustain national morale. His imperial outlook, historical training, and narrative discipline all inform this book's tone and purpose. This volume is recommended to readers interested in how the Somme was understood before the retrospective bitterness of later war literature. It is valuable not only as military history, but as a document of wartime interpretation, revealing how contemporaries sought meaning amid unprecedented destruction.
John Buchan's The Battle of the Somme is a contemporary account of one of the First World War's defining offensives, tracing the campaign's strategic aims, military phases, and moral significance for Britain and its allies. Written in Buchan's lucid, controlled prose, it combines narrative history with patriotic interpretation, emphasizing endurance, coordination, and sacrifice. Its literary context is wartime public history: a work shaped by immediacy, official information, and the need to render industrial warfare intelligible to civilian readers. Buchan, the Scottish novelist, historian, barrister, and public servant best known for The Thirty-Nine Steps, was deeply embedded in Britain's wartime culture of information. His work on Nelson's History of the War and later service in propaganda and government gave him access to military narratives and a keen sense of how history could sustain national morale. His imperial outlook, historical training, and narrative discipline all inform this book's tone and purpose. This volume is recommended to readers interested in how the Somme was understood before the retrospective bitterness of later war literature. It is valuable not only as military history, but as a document of wartime interpretation, revealing how contemporaries sought meaning amid unprecedented destruction.
AmazonPagina's: 76, Paperback, Sharp Ink
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