The Home Front: New Zealand Society and the War Effort 1914-1919
By (Author) James Watson
By (author) Steven Loveridge
Massey University Press
Massey University Press
14th November 2019
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Australasian and Pacific history
940.393
Hardback
496
Width 190mm, Height 250mm, Spine 39mm
1017g
The Great War is now typically regarded as senseless and futile, but most New Zealanders at the time considered it to be a war to preserve security and freedoms, to punish an aggressive enemy and to win a better world. Yet the war years proved a tumultuous time, and bitterness and animosities ran alongside idealism and sacrifice. Families were broken up as soldiers departed. Civil liberties were curtailed as the government wielded unprecedented powers. Divisive issues, economic volatility and a rising death toll all threatened resolve. Finally, in the last weeks of the war, a devastating influenza pandemic arrived in New Zealand and extracted a deadly toll. In The Home Front Steven Loveridge and James Watson offer a compelling account of how a small and developing country confronted the complex questions and brutal realities of a world war.
The Home Frontuses relatively few illustrations but they are superbly reproduced. But it is the clarity and orderliness of the text which makes the book a ready reference to what is an extremely broad subject. The footnotes will direct you to more detailed information and the basically chronological structure takes you easily through five traumatic years. Our first experience of total war was a mixed one andThe Home Frontdepiction of it all is a fine addition to the WW1 library. Jim Sullivan,Otago Daily Times
Steven Loveridge holds a PhD from Victoria University of Wellington and works from the Stout Research Centre for New Zealand Studies. His research focuses on the First World War and he has written and lectured on numerous aspects of the subject. His work has been published in various scholarly journals and anthology works, and in the international encyclopaedia 1914-1918 Online. His first book, Calls to Arms: New Zealand Society and Commitment to the Great War, examines the social and cultural dynamics behind New Zealand's wartime commitment. James Watson is a former Associate-Professor in History at Massey University. His research interests are largely focused on the relationship between New Zealand and the United Kingdom, particularly in the twentieth century, but also include rural history and the history of technology. He co-edited, with David Littlewood and John Crawford, Experience of a Lifetime: People, personalities and leaders in the First World War (Massey University Press, 2015).