Literary and historical conventions have long painted the
experience of soldiers during World War I as simple victimization.
Leonard Smith, however, argues that a complex dialogue of
resistance and negotiation existed between French soldiers and
their own commanders. In this case study of wartime military
culture, Smith analyzes the experience of the French Fifth Infantry
Division in both pitched battle and trench warfare. The division
established a distinguished fighting record from 1914 to 1916, yet
proved in 1917 the most mutinous division in the entire French
army, only to regain its elite reputation in 1918. Drawing on
sources from ordinary soldiers to well-known commanders such as
General Charles Mangin, the author explains how the mutinies of
1917 became an explicit manifestation of an implicit struggle that
took place within the French army over the whole course of the
war.
Smith pays particular attention to the pivotal role of
noncommissioned and junior officers, who both exercised command
authority and shared the physical perils of men in the lower ranks.
He shows that "soldiers," broadly defined, learned to determine
rules of how they would and would not fight the war, and imposed
these rules on the command structure itself. By altering the
parameters of command authority in accordance with their own
perceived interests, soldiers and commanders negotiated a
behavioral space between mutiny and obedience.
Originally published in 1994.
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