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・ World War 11
・ World War 3 Illustrated
・ World War Adjusted Compensation Act
・ World War Blue
・ World War Foreign Debts Commission Act
・ World War Hulk
・ World War Hulks
・ World War I
・ World War I Aeroplanes Fokker D.VII
・ World War I armistice
・ World War I casualties
・ World War I conscription in Australia
・ World War I cryptography
・ World War I defences of Australia
・ World War I film propaganda
World War I in literature
・ World War I in popular culture
・ World War I Memorial
・ World War I Memorial (Atlantic City, New Jersey)
・ World War I Memorial (Berwick, Pennsylvania)
・ World War I Memorial (East Providence, Rhode Island)
・ World War I Memorial (Norfolk, Connecticut)
・ World War I Memorial (Tiruchirappalli)
・ World War I Memorial Flagpole (Hawkins)
・ World War I memorials
・ World War I Memorials and Cemeteries in Alsace
・ World War I naval arms race
・ World War I naval ships of the Ottoman Empire
・ World War I prisoners of war in Germany
・ World War I reenactment


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World War I in literature : ウィキペディア英語版
World War I in literature
Literature in World War I is generally thought to include poems, novels and drama; diaries, letters, and memoirs are often included in this category as well. Although the canon continues to be challenged, the texts most frequently taught in schools and universities are lyrics by Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen; poems by Ivor Gurney, Edward Thomas, Charles Sorley, David Jones and Isaac Rosenberg are also widely anthologised. Many of the works during and about the war were written by men, because of the war's intense demand on the young men of that generation; however, a number of women (especially in the British tradition) created literature about the war, often observing the effects of the war on soldiers, domestic spaces, and the homefront more generally.

==General==
The spread of education in Britain in the decades leading up to World War I meant that British soldiers and the British public of all classes were literate. Professional and amateur authors were prolific during and after the war and found a market for their works.
Literature was produced throughout the war but it was in the late 1920s and early 1930s that Britain had a boom in publication of war literature.〔 The next boom period was in the 1960s, when there was renewed interest in the First World War during the fiftieth anniversaries and after two decades focused on the Second.〔

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