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Nemari Ništa (It Matters Nothing): Six Months With the Serbs

Nemari Ništa (It Matters Nothing): Six Months With the Serbs NEMARI NISTA (IT MATTERS NOTHING): SIX MONTHS WITH THE SERBS S. Miles Franklin CONTENTS One: GETTING THERE Two: THERE Sketch I OUR CAMP Sketch II RECREATION Sketch III THE PLIGHT OF THE SERB Sketch IIII CAMP CARACTERS Sketch V MALARIA Sketch VI OUR HIGHWAY OF CHANCE Villages ­ Vodena ­ Voz Sketch VII SOCIETY ­ HOSPITALITY Sketch VIII FEMININITY AT THE FRONT Sketch IX MUSIC IN MACEDONIA Sketch X IN THE ORDER OF THE DAY Sketch XI THE POSITION OF THE SERB Sketch XII S BOGOM! (GOOD-BYE!) These comments of a camp cook upon experiences gained as a voluntary member of the army of the British Red Cross are submitted unpretentiously for what they are worth as a document of the war. With no straining after tragedy nor attempt to picture hardships or adventures, which, comparatively, did not exist for Red Cross workers on the Salonique front from July 1917 till February 1918, perhaps they may serve to show that black though the clouds, desolate the future, there is still sunshine and laughter. The references to the Serb are just as the writer met him there and then, without effort to trace his lineage from the Flood, or http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Transcultural Studies: A Series in Interdisciplinary Research Brill

Nemari Ništa (It Matters Nothing): Six Months With the Serbs

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© Copyright 2015 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
1930-6253
eISSN
2375-1606
DOI
10.1163/23751606-01002001
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

NEMARI NISTA (IT MATTERS NOTHING): SIX MONTHS WITH THE SERBS S. Miles Franklin CONTENTS One: GETTING THERE Two: THERE Sketch I OUR CAMP Sketch II RECREATION Sketch III THE PLIGHT OF THE SERB Sketch IIII CAMP CARACTERS Sketch V MALARIA Sketch VI OUR HIGHWAY OF CHANCE Villages ­ Vodena ­ Voz Sketch VII SOCIETY ­ HOSPITALITY Sketch VIII FEMININITY AT THE FRONT Sketch IX MUSIC IN MACEDONIA Sketch X IN THE ORDER OF THE DAY Sketch XI THE POSITION OF THE SERB Sketch XII S BOGOM! (GOOD-BYE!) These comments of a camp cook upon experiences gained as a voluntary member of the army of the British Red Cross are submitted unpretentiously for what they are worth as a document of the war. With no straining after tragedy nor attempt to picture hardships or adventures, which, comparatively, did not exist for Red Cross workers on the Salonique front from July 1917 till February 1918, perhaps they may serve to show that black though the clouds, desolate the future, there is still sunshine and laughter. The references to the Serb are just as the writer met him there and then, without effort to trace his lineage from the Flood, or

Journal

Transcultural Studies: A Series in Interdisciplinary ResearchBrill

Published: Jan 1, 2014

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