Angela K. Smith
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The aftermath and the legacy
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This chapter considers the final victory in Serbia, set against the longer term defeat in Russia. After the armistice in 1918 many British women who had been involved in the plight of Serbia for four years took the decision not to go home. The Scottish Women’s Hospitals stayed and engaged in continuing relief work in a broken country, running roadside dispensaries and canteens, opening hospitals and orphanages, some committing themselves to Serbia permanently. This chapter explores these post-war roles and draws together the legacy of the British women in the Balkans by examining their relief operations. The rise of the USSR in the Inter-war years had a significant impact on the structure of Europe as a whole, particularly the Balkan States. In 1937, Rebecca West travelled across the Balkans, the new Yugoslavia, documenting what she saw and placing it in the context of its recent history. She recorded her experiences in Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, a book about travel and politics that helps to consolidate the work of many of the women considered in this book. An analysis of West's writing will act as a framing device for this conclusion

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British women of the Eastern Front

War, writing and experience in Serbia and Russia, 1914–20

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