Story Setting: Early 1920s England, Post-WW1 Britain.
Search Terms: long term shell shock treatment / shell shock dietary regime
/ post war shell shock treatment / officers shell shock world war one / world war one shell shock case study / neurasthenia treatment 1920s / shell shock rehabilitation
Hi!
I'm writing in post-World War I 1920s England and I'
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Do you have any specific queries about the 1920s? I'll be teaching the period after Christmas, so I am currently fairly well up on it and have the books to hand!
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1920s query-wise I'm looking for info on domestic/social detail, such as where did people (young and older) go out to at the time to socialise/for fun, were there any fads in food/drink/style (well, it doesn't need to be a 'fad', I'm really looking for just what would men and women have, say, ordered to drink at the time, or drank at home whilst they were entertaining friends), and any phrases/slang around Britain at the time (it's easy to find American slang but harder to find dialogue quirks specifically British!). You teach about the period? That's fascinating! Sincerely wishing I could take your class!
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Also from it, I note that if the family had servants, that would have a lot of impact on the matter.
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Four Frightened People by E. Arnot Robinson takes place in either the late twenties or early thirties, I can't quite recall, and has some details of life in Britain (and the characters are British). It's appallingly racist, fair warning, but if you want to read it for period details, it could be useful.
A good biography of Siegfried Sassoon might also give you a lot of information about PTSD treatment and post-war British life in general.
Sorry, this isn't really my area, but it's what springs to mind. Hope it helps!
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And thank you for the books recs, I'll check them out, they seem just what I'm looking for!
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And perfect, thank you, I was hoping to find some specific people/cases to look into for more personal details to go along with the more general statistics of history books!
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For watching, and this is more specifically about upper class people, I'd recommend the original Brideshead Revisited mini-series which has a significant portion set in the 1920s.
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Ha, I'm totally going to be raiding libraries and bookstores for Dorothy L. Sayers tomorrow!
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