2 research outputs found

    Love and limblessness: male heterosexuality, disability, and the Great War

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    Tens of thousands of British men were permanently wounded as a result of war service. Their return home sparked debates about the wounded male body, female accountability for war-injuries, and the ideology, performance, and practice of masculinity. Other historians have shown how ‘broken heroes’ from the First World War were constituted into ‘men’ in four contexts: physical appearance, occupation, sport, and Britishness. This article explores a fifth dimension: sexuality. It explores debates about the need for war-disabled men to establish stable marital relationships and investigates some attempts to encourage this, including encouraging women to take the initiative in proposing marriage and the establishment of The League for the Marrying of Broken Heroes

    Field, lab and museum The practice and place of life science in Yorkshire, 1870-1904

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    Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN041923 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreSIGLEGBUnited Kingdo
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