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Data derived from the Bibliography of British and Irish History.

About the Bibliography of British and Irish History (BBIH)

The Bibliography of British and Irish History is an essential tool for the study, research, and teaching of British and Irish history. It is the largest and most comprehensive guide available to published writing on:

  • Local histories – covering British and Irish history from 55 BCE to the present.
  • Global histories – covering Britain and Ireland’s relations overseas including former British colonies and Commonwealth countries.
  • Interdisciplinary and emerging areas within history – such as the histories of migration, race and ethnicity, gender and sexual identities, social class, dis/ability, mental health, environmental history and the history of emotions.

The Bibliography is the essential resource for historical study, teaching and research and is a research project of the UK’s Institute of Historical Research (IHR) and Brepols. With new records added three times a year, BBIH provides up-to-date information on over 670,000: 

  • History books, articles, book chapters and edited collections (published from the early 1900s to present).
  • History theses (submitted late 1990s to present).

These records are searchable by a wide range of facets including: title, author, chronology, date and form of publication, historical topic, and geographical region.

Researching military histories in BBIH

The Bibliography contains more than 70,100 publications related to military history. Topics range from:

  • Specific British, Irish and colonial and commonwealth armed forces and the wars and battles they have been involved in.
  • Various aspects of military affairs including the histories of defence policies and military strategies, miliary morale, and prisoners of war.

BBIH’s subject tree offers a powerful way of searching by subject because it uses terminology systematically applied to records by BBIH’s editors: your results will not depend on the appearance of words in titles or in keywords provided by authors. You can learn more about the subject tree by watching this video.

Researching the social and intellectual aspects of military histories in BBIH

The following reading list offers 320 publications focusing on the social and intellectual aspects of military histories in Britain, Ireland, the British empire and the Commonwealth. It uses as it’s starting points the following keywords in BBIH’s hierarchical subject tree:

  • War and militarism, attitudes to, a subcategory of Political thought (within the top level subject category Intellectual, cultural and artistic history).
  • War, impact of (within the top-level subject category Other topics).

The books, articles, book chapters and theses in this reading list were published between 2022 and 2025. Our coverage in this growing area of historical research is ongoing, and further publications will be added in future updates of the Bibliography.

Access the full text from BBIH

Records for journal articles or books may include a ‘Full text’ link.

For journal articles, this link will take you to the abstract via the publisher’s website. If you have access to a library that subscribes to the journal, you’ll then be able to go straight to the full text (you may need to log on to your institutional library).

For books, this link will connect you to the eBook or open access versions of the work where they’ve been made available by the publisher.

BBIH online help pack

You can learn more about using BBIH by visiting our page of online tutorials, which include: 

  • The basics of searching, including how to use the subject tree 
  • How to use your results 
  • How to keep up-to-date with the latest published research in your field or manage your reference lists or bibliographies 
  • Behind-the-scenes guide to how BBIH is compiled. 

Short video guides are designed for: 

  • New undergraduates and those planning and researching a final year dissertation 
  • MA and PhD students for whom BBIH is essential for writing a literature review and studying secondary fields of interest. 

Lecturers, teachers and librarians will find it helpful that the Bibliography’s online tutorials can all be embedded in a virtual learning environment (VLE). Presentations are also available here to promote the Bibliography to your students and staff.  

Subscribe to BBIH
Full access to BBIH’s 670,000+ records is via subscription: many UK and international university and research libraries subscribe and provide full access to members. Individual subscriptions are also available for personal use including substantially reduced rates for:

  • IHR Friends and Fellows.
  • Royal Historical Society Fellows and members.
  • Members of the British Association for Local History and Historical Association.

Reading list

Adamson, K. (2023) ‘“Arán an Lae Amáireach”: Flour Extraction and Fortification in Emergency Ireland, 1939–1948’, Irish Economic and Social History, 50(1), pp. 93–111. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/03324893231161928.

Adlington, L., 1970- (ed.) (2022) Great War fashion: tales from the history wardrobe / Lucy Adlington. (Second edition). Cheltenham, Gloucestershire: History Press.

Afolabi, A.S. (2023) ‘British Food (In)security Policies in Colonial Nigeria and Popular Reactions in the Southwestern and Southeastern Provinces, 1939–45’, Africa Today, 70(2), pp. 91–111.

Agarwal, P. (2022) ‘The War at the Workplace: Calcutta’s Dockworkers and Changing Labour Regime, 1939–1945’, International Review of Social History, 67(3), pp. 407–434. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0020859022000013.

Airaksinen, T. (2022) ‘Berkeley’s Passive Obedience: positive and negative norms’, History of European Ideas, 48(1), pp. 66–77. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2021.1913209.

Alexander, K. (2023) ‘Mourning the Dead of the Great Escape: POWs, Grief, and the Memorial Vault of Stalag Luft III’, Journal of War and Culture Studies, 16(3), pp. 332–353. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/17526272.2022.2097774.

Almond, S. (2022) ‘“When that hour strikes danger, we sally forth”: women doctors at war, 1939–1945’, Women’s History Review, 31(5), pp. 848–867. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/09612025.2021.2002514.

Alonso, I.H. and Amstutz, A. (2023) ‘Rethinking the Second World War in South Asia: Between theatres and beyond battles’, Modern Asian Studies, 57(5), pp. 1449–1458. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x2300015x.

Ambrose, C.T. (2022) ‘A letter about Jean Fernel by Charles Sherrington and the mind–brain connection’, Journal of Medical Biography, 30(2), pp. 72–81. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0967772019858235.

Amrein, S. (ed.) (2025) Capital in Banking: The Role of Capital in Banking in the 19th and 20th Century: The United Kingdom, the United States and Switzerland. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Studies in macroeconomic history). Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009276887.

Andrén, M. (2022) ‘Atomic War or World Peace Order? Karl Jaspers, Denis de Rougemont, Bertrand Russell’, Global Intellectual History, 7(4), pp. 784–800. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/23801883.2020.1830494.

Andrews, M. (2023) ‘Rent Arrears, Food Shortages and Evacuees: How War Enters the Worcester Home in Two World Wars’, Midland History, 48(3), pp. 369–386. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0047729X.2023.2266759.

Anta, C.G. (2022) ‘The Pacifism of Bertrand Russell during the Great War’, History of European Ideas, 48(4), pp. 438–453. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2021.1944267.

Anta, C.G. (2023) ‘Bertrand Russell and Albert Einstein through the meanders of scientific pacifism’, History of European Ideas, 49(7), pp. 1134–1143. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2023.2185802.

Ardeleanu, C. (2024) ‘Riding the Line. Expertise and the Making of the Bessarabian Border, 1856–1857’, Journal of Modern European History, 22(1), pp. 10–24. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/16118944231221026.

Ariotti, K. (2022) ‘Between Death and Commemoration: The Treatment of Australian POW Dead on the Thai–Burma Railway, 1942–45’, Australian Historical Studies, 53(2), pp. 327–347. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/1031461X.2021.1981414.

Arukwe, N.O. (2022) ‘Africa’s Contributions to the Economy of Europe’s Two “World” Wars: De-centering the Dominant Narrative’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 57(1), pp. 137–149. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096211054916.

Backscheider, P.R., 1943- (2023) ‘Queen Anne’s Other Women’, in A. Battigelli (ed.) Literature and the Arts: Interdisciplinary Essays in Memory of James Anderson Winn. Newark (DE): University of Delaware Press, pp. 131–150. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.18501127.11.

Banerjee, A.K. (2023) ‘Of Loss, Belonging and Remembrance: Indian Poetic Responses to World War I’, South Asia, 46(2), pp. 464–480. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00856401.2023.2178754.

Barnes, A.A. (2024) ‘Reasserting Local Politics: The East Riding “War Ag” during the Second World War’, Northern History, 61(2), pp. 281–300. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0078172X.2024.2358484.

Barringer, T.J. (2022) ‘Ambiguities of Imperial Mourning: The Patcham Chattri’, Art History, 45(3), pp. 570–597. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8365.12651.

Bate, J. (ed.) (2022) Photography in the Great War: the ethics of emerging medical collections from the Great War / Jason Bate. London: Bloomsbury Academic (Facialities). Available at: https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350122079.

Baxter, K., 1930- (ed.) (2022) I’ll take that one: an evacuees childhood / Kitty Baxter. London: Allison and Busby.

Beales, J. (2024) ‘“Of One Blood?”: Gendered Propaganda and Blood Donor Behaviour in Wartime Bristol and South West England, 1939–1945’, Social History of Medicine, 37(1), pp. 204–228. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkad040.

Bell, A.H., 1973- (ed.) (2024) Under cover of darkness: murders in blackout London. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press. Available at: https://doi.org/10.12987/9780300280227.

Bell, H.K. (ed.) (2022) World War II: childhood memories–adult reflections [World War Two] / edited by Hazel Bell. Hatfield, Herts.: [HKB Press].

Bell, S. and Snape, M.F. (eds) (2023) British Christianity and the Second World War. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell Press (Studies in modern British religious history).

Bennett, E. (2023) ‘« Son frère d’armes revient de guerre » : réflexion sur le retour des guerriers et les rituels de purification dans le haut Moyen Âge britannique [“His Battle-Brother back from the Fray”: Considerations on Returning Warriors and Cleansing Rituals in Early Medieval Britain]’, Médiévales, 84, pp. 25–42. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/medievales.12430.

Berns, T. (2024) ‘Normativités pirates : à partir d’une singularité commune à Bodin, Grotius et Hobbes [Pirate normativities: from a singularity common to Bodin, Grotius and Hobbes]’, Astérion, 30, p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4000/12b0q.

Bond, M. and Morton, J. (2022) ‘Trajectories of Aristocratic Wealth, 1858–2018: Evidence from Probate’, Journal of British Studies, 61(3), pp. 644–675. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2022.52.

Bowden, M. and Brodie, A. (eds) (2024) England’s Military Heritage from the Air. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.

Brandon‐Salmon, A. (2022) ‘The Back of Her Head: The Fashionable Wartime Ruins of Cecil Beaton’, Art History, 45(4), pp. 858–879. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8365.12667.

Brandon‐Salmon, A. (2024) ‘Wastelands: East End Bombsites in Postwar Photography’, Oxford Art Journal, 47(2), pp. 197–221. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxartj/kcae018.

Brassard, G. (2022) ‘“Not the mother type”: Exploding the Myth of Maternal Devotion in Marghanita Laski’s To Bed with Grand Music’, Literature & History, 31(2), pp. 134–151. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/03061973221139264.

Breadman, J. (2023) ‘Calories and Culture: Food, Drink, and the British Army in Early Nineteenth Century Upper Canada’, Ontario History, 115(1), pp. 21–42. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7202/1098783ar.

Breuilly, J., 1946- (2023) ‘Christopher Coker, 1953–2023’, Nations and Nationalism, 29(4), p. 1163. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/nana.12997.

Brooks, A. (2022) ‘Shot at dawn: Memorializing First World War executions for cowardice in the landscape of the UK’s National Memorial Arboretum’, Post-Medieval Archaeology, 56(1), pp. 28–42. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00794236.2022.2055313.

Bubczyk, R. (2023) ‘Religiosity and Religious Rituals in the Battle of Bannockburn, 1314’, in R. Kotecki, J. Maciejewski, and G. Leighton (eds) Religious Rites of War beyond the Medieval West, Volume 1. Leiden: Brill (Explorations in medieval culture), pp. 71–188. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004686366_006.

Buchan, B., 1968- (2023) ‘Travels in Space and Time: Progress, War, and the Historical Mobilities of Scotland’s Enlightenment’, Global Intellectual History, 8(4), pp. 409–427. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/23801883.2022.2074504.

Buckton, O.S. (2024) ‘“The safety of the realm”: fact, fiction, and wartime trauma in Ian Fleming’s James Bond novels’, Intelligence and National Security, 39(2), pp. 265–280. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/02684527.2023.2291870.

Bugg, J.W., 1972- (ed.) (2022) British romanticism and peace [British Romanticism & peace] / John Bugg. (First edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198839668.001.0001.

Burdett, S. (ed.) (2023) The arms-bearing woman and British theatre in the age of revolution, 1789-1815 / Sarah Burdett. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan (Palgrave studies in the Enlightenment, romanticism, and the cultures of print).

Byram, M. (2023) ‘Nationalism and internationalism in education in Europe in the 1920s through the eyes of an American observer’, Paedagogica Historica, 59(2), pp. 342–360. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2021.1872659.

Carrington, J., 1726-1810, Flood, S. (Archivist), and Hertfordshire Record Society (eds) (2022) The diary of John Carrington, farmer of Bramfield, 1789-1810, and John Carrington junior’s diary, May 1810-December 1812 . Volume 2 1805-1810 / edited and with an introduction by Susan Flood. [Hitchin]: Hertfordshire Record Society (Hertfordshire Record Publications). Available at: http://www.hrsociety.org.uk/ (Accessed: 16 June 2025).

Chukwuokolo, C.J. (2022) ‘The Ethics of War and War-Making: A Philosophical Interrogation of African Involvement in the World Wars and Their Exclusion From War Monuments and Memorials’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 57(1), pp. 131–136. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096211054915.

Coleman, B. and Milton, M., 1966- (eds) (2022) How lucky I was: A book of Sea Mills memories / Written by Betty Coleman [and six others]; Edited by Mary Milton. [Sevenoaks]: Independent Publishing Network.

Condos, M. (2023) ‘Emergency, Exception, and the Colonial Rule of Law: The Case of British India’, First World War Studies, 14(1), pp. 25–50. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2024.2307056.

Connell, K. (2024) ‘An African American Anthropologist in Wales: St. Clair Drake and the Transatlantic Ecologies of Race Relations’, Journal of British Studies, 63(1), pp. 167–198. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2023.113.

Connelly, M. (ed.) (2022) Postcards from the Western Front: pilgrims, veterans, and tourists after the Great War / Mark Connelly. Montréal (PQ): McGill-Queen’s University Press (Human dimensions in foreign policy, military studies, and security studies series).

Connelly, M. and Jones, T. (2024) ‘Commemorating the Great War on Film: Veterans, Pilgrimages and Amateur Filmmaking’, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, 44(2), pp. 319–340. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01439685.2024.2307110.

Cooke, T. (2022) ‘A New Memorial to Veterans of the Peninsular War and Waterloo’, Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, 100(401), pp. 146–146.

Copp, T. (ed.) (2022) Montreal at war, 1914-1918 / Terry Copp with Alexander Maavara. Toronto: University of Toronto Press (The Canadian experience of war).

Cornelius, P. and Rhein, D. (2022) ‘“Of course it is idealised”: Lindsay Anderson’s Every Day Except Christmas’, Journal of British Cinema and Television, 19(1), pp. 67–86. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2022.0604.

Creamer, D. (2024) ‘Dr Agnes Savill: Pioneer, polymath and dermatology’s renaissance woman’, Journal of Medical Biography, 32(1), pp. 103–109. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/09677720221106794.

Crymble, A. (2023) ‘The impact of military demobilisation on rising Irish migration to London, c.1750–1850’, Irish Historical Studies, 47(172), pp. 217–237. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2023.43.

Daly, G. (ed.) (2022) Storm and sack: British sieges, violence and the laws of war in the Napoleonic era, 1799-1815 / Gavin Daly. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (Cambridge military histories).

Dampier, H. and Gill, R. (2023) ‘Constructing a Humanitarian Self: Emily Hobhouse’s Auto/Biographical Traces, 1899-1926’, Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 20(3), pp. 349–366. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14780038.2022.2147411.

Davidson, J.R.T., 1943- and Hart, R. (2023) ‘Bernard Hart (1879–1966) and his influence on British psychiatry’, Journal of Medical Biography, 31(3), pp. 168–173. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/09677720211044080.

Davies, W. (2022) ‘Thomas MacGreevy’s Combatant Modernism’, Irish University Review, 52(2), pp. 283–301. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/iur.2022.0568.

Davis, C. (2022) ‘“A Man’s Lot”: Marriage, Military Service, and the First World War’, Australian Journal of Politics & History, 68(3), pp. 359–375. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/ajph.12862.

Deakin, Q. (ed.) (2023) Wales in World War 2 / Quentin Deakin. Talybont: Y Lolfa.

Deans, P.W. (ed.) (2024) Crisis, Reinvention and Resilience in Museums: Defence and Revolution at the Imperial War Museum, 1933-1950. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-67806-6.

Delport, A. and Kleynhans, E. (2023) ‘“Widening the Lens”: New Perspectives on the Impact of the Second World War on Southern Africa’, Journal of African Military History, 7(1–2), pp. 1–17. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1163/24680966-bja10022.

Demetriades, A.K. (2022) ‘The First Eastern General Hospital (1914–1919) of the Royal Army Medical Corps at Cambridge’, Journal of Medical Biography, 30(4), pp. 225–232. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0967772021989696.

Destenay, E. (2023) ‘Future directions in rural history: Ireland, the First World War and the search for historical evidence’, Rural History, 34(1), pp. 137–146. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/s0956793322000255.

Dettman, S. (2022) ‘Edward Murrow and the “Little People”of the Blitz: A Study in American Idealism’, in A. Wilson, J. Fennell, and R. Hammond (eds) The Peoples’ War?: The Second World War in Sociopolitical Perspective. Montréal (PQ): McGill-Queen’s University Press, pp. 185–206. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1515/9780228015895-009.

Dettman, S. and Toye, R., 1973- (2023) ‘The Discourse of “The People’s War” in Britain and the USA during World War II’, English Historical Review, 138(594–595), pp. 1089–1117. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceae006.

Devji, F. (2024) ‘Escaping the Global Event: Pan-Islam and the First World War’, Modern Intellectual History, 21(3), pp. 503–523. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1479244324000209.

Devlin, A. (2024) ‘Irish Provisional Government, 1922: a case study of economic policymaking in a new state’, Irish Political Studies, 39(2), pp. 206–228. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/07907184.2024.2334491.

Di Rosa, D. (2022) ‘“If It Wasn’t For Us … ”: Peripheral Narratives of the Pacific War’, Journal of Pacific History, 57(1), pp. 39–57. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00223344.2021.2000382.

Donlon, R. (ed.) (2022) The burning of Knockcroghery village, Co. Roscommon, 1921 / Regina Donlon. Dublin: Four Courts (Maynooth Studies in Local History).

Dooley, T.A.M., 1964- (ed.) (2022) Burning the big house: the story of the Irish country house in a time of war and revolution / Terence Dooley. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Downing, T. (ed.) (2022) 1942: Britain at the brink [Nineteen forty-two] / Taylor Downing. London: Little, Brown.

Drury, N., 1884-1975 and Grayson, R.S., 1969- (eds) (2022) The First World War diary of Noël Drury, 6th Royal Dublin Fusiliers: Gallipoli, Salonika, the Middle East and the Western Front / edited by Richard S. Grayson. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press for the Army Records Society (Army Records Society).

Durbach, N., 1971- (2022) ‘“Why Cant 2 Brothers”? World War I and Britain’s Deceased Brother’s Widow Act of 1921’, Journal of Family History, 47(1), pp. 3–23. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/0363199020988326.

Dziennik, M.P., 1984- (2023) ‘The Scottish Highlands and Warfare in the British Atlantic World, c. 1740–1815’, in A. Tindley, S.K. Kehoe, and C. Dalglish (eds) Scottish Highlands and the Atlantic World: Social Networks and Identities. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press (Histories of the Scottish Atlantic), pp. 91–112. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474494304.003.0006.

Edgerton, D. (2023) ‘A Cliché to Be Avoided Like the Plague: The “People’s War” in the History and Historiography of the British Second World War’, English Historical Review, 138(594–595), pp. 1143–1164. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/ceae003.

Edgerton, D. (2024) ‘The United Kingdom’s disappearing wartime imports 1939–45: A statistical, ideological, and historiographical accounting’, Economic History Review, 77(1), pp. 119–136. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.13254.

Edwards, S. (2022a) ‘“To Imperishable Memory”: Lancaster’s Crimean War Monument, C.1855–1862’, Northern History, 59(2), pp. 239–260. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0078172X.2022.2112004.

Edwards, S. (2022b) ‘Towards a Local History of Interwar Anglo – American Relations: Commemorating the Pilgrim Fathers on the Humber, c.1918–1925’, Britain and the World, 15(2), pp. 142–167. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/brw.2022.0390.

Einhaus, A.-M. and Shaw, K. (2022) ‘Writers and Intellectuals on Britain and Europe, 1918-2018: An Introduction’, Open Library of Humanities, 8(1), p. [unpaged]. Available at: https://doi.org/10.16995/olh.8890.

Ejiogu, E.C. and Igwedibia, A. (2022) ‘The World Wars and Their Legacies in Africa and in the Affairs of Africans: The Case of East Africa—Kenya’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 57(1), pp. 113–130. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096211054914.

Ejiogu, E.C. and Umego, N.L. (2022) ‘Africa and Africans in the World Wars: The Prelude and Disposition for Leveraged Exploitation through Violence and Coercion’, Journal of Asian and African Studies, 57(1), pp. 29–46. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00219096211054908.

Evans, B. (ed.) (2022) Feeding the people in wartime Britain / Bryce Evans. London: Bloomsbury Academic (Food in modern history). Available at: https://doi.org/10.5040/9781350281004.

Evans, C. and Rumens, N. (2022) ‘Gender inequality and the professionalisation of accountancy in the UK from 1870 to the interwar years’, Business History, 64(7), pp. 1244–1259. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2020.1763958.

Falcon, K. (ed.) (2023) Haunted Britain: spiritualism, psychical research and the Great War. Manchester: Manchester University Press (Cultural history of modern war).

Falconer, D., 1934- (ed.) (2022) Wartime Bath: Life on the Home Front 1939-45 / David and Jonathan Falconer. (Revised and updated new edition). [Frome]: JJN Publishing.

Fantauzzo, J. (2022) ‘“Malaria Has Spoilt It”: Malaria, Neuropsychiatric Complications, and Insanity in ex-Servicemen in Post-First World War Britain’, Social History of Medicine, 35(4), pp. 1267–1284. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkac036.

Fara, P. (2023) ‘Chemical “canaries”: Munitions workers in the First World War’, History of Science, 61(4), pp. 546–560. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/00732753231173063.

Farmer, R. (2024) ‘“Bridal Outfits from the Heart of Filmland”: Clothes Rationing, Wartime Film Production and Gainsborough Pictures’ Studio Hire Service’, Journal of British Cinema and Television, 21(2), pp. 215–238. Available at: https://doi.org/10.3366/jbctv.2024.0714.

Fathi, R., 1987- (2022) ‘Suppressing an “undesirable public controversy”: Corpses, the Department of Defence, and the Australian Graves Services, 1919–1921’, History Australia, 19(3), pp. 487–505. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14490854.2022.2054444.

Ferreiro, L.D. (ed.) (2022) Churchill’s American arsenal: the partnership behind the innovations that won World War Two / Larrie D. Ferreiro. New York: Oxford University Press.

Fleming, N.C. (2023) ‘Empire, Community, and the Limits of “Sea-Mindedness”: The Navy League and Worcester, c. 1896–1914’, Midland History, 48(3), pp. 328–351. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0047729X.2023.2266761.

Foster, A.-M. (2022) ‘The Bureaucratization of Death: The First World War, Families, and the State’, 20th Century British History, 33(4), pp. 475–497. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/tcbh/hwac001.

Fox, A. (2022) ‘“I Have Never Felt More Utterly Yours”: Presence, Intimacy, and Long-Distance Marriages in the First World War’, Journal of British Studies, 61(3), pp. 676–701. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/jbr.2022.56.

Francis-Brown, S. (ed.) (2022) World War II camps in Jamaica: evacuees, refugees, internees, prisoners of war. Kingston, Jamaica: The University of the West Indies Press.

Frayn, A. and Houston, F. (2022) ‘The War Books Boom in Britain, 1928–1930’, First World War Studies, 13(1), pp. 25–45. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/19475020.2022.2129718.

Fry, H., 1967- (ed.) (2023) Women in Intelligence: The Hidden History of Two World Wars / Helen Fry. New Haven: Yale University Press. Available at: https://doi.org/10.12987/9780300274530.

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