Matthew Stibbe
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The experience of revolution
Soldiers, sailors, civilians, young people
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This chapter explores post-1990s debates on the subjective experiences of ordinary Germans during the First World War and the 1918–19 Revolution, looking in particular at work by German and international scholars on men serving in the army and navy, and on women, teenagers and other non-combatants surviving on the home front. With respect to soldiers and sailors, it makes the case for examining not just battlefield experiences, but also experiences of leave from the front, service in the reserve army at home, and cases of desertion from the same. War weariness was expressed in manifold ways, but rarely through direct involvement with organised political parties. When it comes to women and teenagers, the chapter questions why, in past and present historiography, they have often been overlooked compared with men serving in the military. The chapter also tackles the issue of wartime generational identities and intergenerational conflict, concluding that the latter was less significant in the minds of contemporaries than the shared desire to end the war and address the crisis of hunger and poor living standards that was threatening to overwhelm the entire population.

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