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In A Minor Apocalypse, Robert Blobaum explores the social and cultural history of Warsaw's "forgotten war" of 1914–1918. Beginning with the bank panic that accompanied the outbreak of the Great War, Blobaum guides his readers through spy scares, bombardments, mass migratory movements, and the Russian evacuation of 1915.
Robert Blobaum is Eberly Family Distinguished Professor of History and Chair of the Department of History at West Virginia University. He is the editor of Antisemitism and Its Opponents in Modern Poland, also from Cornell, and author of Feliks Dzierzynski and the SDKPiL: A Study of the Origins of Polish Communism.
"In A Minor Apocalypse, Robert Blobaum presents a powerful new narrative of the occupied East during 1914–1918. We know that the Eastern Front was horrific during World War II, and Blobaum's social history of life in Warsaw during wartime shows that conditions during World War I were not dissimilar. Blobaum has done an extraordinary job of teasing out ordinary people’s experiences from between the lines of public proclamations and from the silences he has mined from extant sources."
Brian Porter-Szűcs, Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of History, University of Michigan, author of Poland in the Modern World: Beyond Martyrdom:
"A Minor Apocalypse is the first history of Warsaw in World War I to appear in decades and the first ever in English. Few people in Poland want to remember World War I except as the prelude to independence, and, as a result, the horrible suffering experienced in Warsaw during the war is never discussed. Until reading this book, I had no idea that the situation in the city was so bad, and many readers will be surprised to learn of the events Robert Blobaum describes so clearly. Blobaum's earlier work is mandatory reading in the history of Poland and Eastern Europe, and this meticulously researched, well-written, and persuasively argued book is sure to join that list."
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