What is it about?

Italian performance in the First World War has been generally disparaged or ignored compared to that of the armies on the Western Front, and troop morale in particular has been seen as a major weakness of the Italian army. In this first book-length study of Italian morale in any language, Vanda Wilcox reassesses Italian policy and performance from the perspective both of the army as an institution and of the ordinary soldiers who found themselves fighting a brutally hard war. Wilcox analyses and contextualises Italy's notoriously hard military discipline along with leadership, training methods and logistics before considering the reactions of the troops and tracing the interactions between institutions and individuals. Restoring historical agency to soldiers often considered passive and indifferent, Wilcox illustrates how and why Italians complied, endured or resisted the army's demands through balancing their civilian and military identities.

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Why is it important?

This book will be of interest to anyone wanting to learn more about the Italian experience of the First World War, but is also relevant to scholars of military morale and discipline, and the relationship between war and nation-building.

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This page is a summary of: Morale and the Italian Army during the First World War, January 2016, Cambridge University Press,
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9781316661840.
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