Introduction / Mary Hammond and Shafquat Towheed -- Pt. 1. Profit and patriotism. For country, conscience and commerce: publishers and publishing, 1914-18 / Jane Potter -- 'No such bookselling has ever before taken place in this country': propaganda and the wartime distribution practices of W.H. Smith & Son / Stephen Colclough -- Translating peace: pacifist publishing and the transmission of foreign texts / Grace Brockington -- pt. II. Reading and national consciousness. Sepoys, sahibs and the babus: India, the Great War and two colonial journals / Santanu Das -- The battle of the books: supplying prisoners of war / Rainer Pöppinghege -- Australian soldiers and the world of print during the Great War / Amanda Laugesen -- pt. III. Writing the trenches. The tuition of manhood: 'Sapper's' war stories and the literature of war / Jessic Meyer -- British Army trench journals and a geography of identity / John Pegum -- 'A new and vital moral factor': cartoon book publishing in Britain during the First World War / Nicholas Hiley -- pt. IV. Enlisted at home. Translating propaganda: John Buchan's writing during the First World War / Kate Macdonald -- Making a text the Fordian way: Between St. Dennis and St. George, propaganda and the First World War / Sara Haslam -- Depicting the war on the Western Front: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and the publication of The British campaign in France and Flanders / Keith Grieves.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.