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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Military, Civilian, and Political Internments: Examining Great War Internments Together 1
-
Part I: Internments in Europe
- 1. (Dis)entangling the Local, the National, and the International: Civilian Internment in Germany and in German-Occupied France and Belgium in Global Context 23
- 2. The Captives of the Kaiser: Schutzhaft and Political Prisoners in Germany 52
- 3. Securitized Protection: Health Work in Wartime Austria-Hungary and the Making of Refugee Camps 73
- 4. Alexandra Palace: A Concentration Camp in the Heart of London 92
- 5. Prisoner-of-War Civilian Experience: The Role of Profession among POWs in Russia 111
- 6. The Face and Race of the Enemy: German POW Photographs as a Weapon of War 128
-
Part II: Internments beyond Europe
- 7. “Enemies of Our Country”: Internment in Canada’s Rocky Mountains National Park, 1915–1917 157
- 8. Globalizing Captivity: “Little Germany in China” in Japan 181
- 9. German Propaganda and the African and Asian Theaters of the War 202
-
Part III: Interwar Repercussions and Beyond
- 10. Internment after the War’s End: “Humanitarian Camps” in the POW Repatriation Process, 1918–1923 221
- 11. POWs, Civilians, and the Postwar Development of International Humanitarian Law 244
- Conclusion: World War I and Its Internments: Final Remarks 263
- References 277
- Contributors 303
- Index 309
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Introduction: Military, Civilian, and Political Internments: Examining Great War Internments Together 1
-
Part I: Internments in Europe
- 1. (Dis)entangling the Local, the National, and the International: Civilian Internment in Germany and in German-Occupied France and Belgium in Global Context 23
- 2. The Captives of the Kaiser: Schutzhaft and Political Prisoners in Germany 52
- 3. Securitized Protection: Health Work in Wartime Austria-Hungary and the Making of Refugee Camps 73
- 4. Alexandra Palace: A Concentration Camp in the Heart of London 92
- 5. Prisoner-of-War Civilian Experience: The Role of Profession among POWs in Russia 111
- 6. The Face and Race of the Enemy: German POW Photographs as a Weapon of War 128
-
Part II: Internments beyond Europe
- 7. “Enemies of Our Country”: Internment in Canada’s Rocky Mountains National Park, 1915–1917 157
- 8. Globalizing Captivity: “Little Germany in China” in Japan 181
- 9. German Propaganda and the African and Asian Theaters of the War 202
-
Part III: Interwar Repercussions and Beyond
- 10. Internment after the War’s End: “Humanitarian Camps” in the POW Repatriation Process, 1918–1923 221
- 11. POWs, Civilians, and the Postwar Development of International Humanitarian Law 244
- Conclusion: World War I and Its Internments: Final Remarks 263
- References 277
- Contributors 303
- Index 309