Introduction.: The Things They Carried: War, Mobility,and
Material Culture.
Part I. States of Things:: The Making of ModernNation-States and
Empires
1. The Honor of the Trophy:: A Prussian Bronze in
theNapoleonic Era
2. Colliding Empires:: French Display of Roman Antiquities
Expropriated from Postconquest Algeria, 1830–1870
3. Pretty Things, Ugly Histories:: Decorating with
PersecutedPeople's Property in Central Bohemia, 1938–1958
Part II. People and Things:: Individual Use of Things in
Wartime
4. "Peeled" Bodies, Pillaged Homes:: Looting and
MaterialCulture in the American Civil War Era
5. Embodied Violence:: A Red Army Soldier's Journey asTold by
Objects
6. Small Escapes:: Gender, Class, and Material Culture inGreat War
Internment Camps
7. The Bricolage of Death:: Jewish Possessions and the Fashioningof
the Prisoner Elite in Auschwitz-Birkenau, 1942–1945
Part III. Afterlives:: From Things to Memories
8. Lisa's
Things:: Matching Jewish-German and Indian-Muslim Traditions
9. Circuitous Journeys:: The Migration of Objects andthe
Trusteeship of Memory
10. Paku Karen Skirt-Cloths (Not) at Home:: ForciblyMigrated
Burmese Textiles in Refugee Camps and Museums
Epilogue
Leora Auslander is Professor of European Social History and Arthur and Joann Rasmussen Professor of Western Civilization at the University of Chicago. She is the author of Cultural Revolutions and Taste and Power. Tara Zahra is Professor of East European History at the University of Chicago. She is the author of Kidnapped Souls, The Lost Children, and The Great Departure.
In a feat rarely accomplished in an edited volume of such breadth, the chapters in Objects of War are in conversation with one another throughout the book. Together, the chapters make a compelling case to move beyond the battlefield and examine the objects so easily tossed aside by war. (Los Angeles Review of Books) Editors Leora Auslander and Tara Zahra have put together a collection of articles in Objects of War that each contain detailed analysis of material possessions and their significance during conflicts of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Overall, this collection of essays is highly recommended for the scholarly audience. The editors have brought together a collection that show how objects are affected by people and vice-versa, when revolutions and large-scale armed conflicts displace populations. (Army University Press) The book, Objects of War, illuminates the ways in which people have used things to grapple with the social, cultural, and psychological upheavals wrought by war and forced displacement. (Utah Public Radio)
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