John Galsworthy - recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize for literature
- was one of the best-selling authors of the twentieth century. His
literary reputation overshadows what he achieved during the Great
War, which was his humanitarian support for and his compositions
about soldiers disabled in the conflict. John Galsworthy and
disabled soldiers of the Great War represents the most
comprehensive study published to date about this literature of the
'war to end all wars'. It makes available for the first time in a
single edition the most significant of his compositions about
disabled soldiers, recovering them from scholarly neglect,
examining their value as historical documents and connecting them
to iconic images and artifacts of the period. This study will be of
interest to a wide academic audience, to readers interested in the
history of the Great War, to policymakers associated with veterans'
issues, and to medical professionals in the fields of physical
medicine and rehabilitation. -- .
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