Author: GOODALL, FELICITY Title: A Question of Conscience - Conscientious Objection in the Two World Wars
Description: Stroud, Gloucestershie, Sutton Publishing. 1997, First Edition. (ISBN: 0750907401). Hard Cover, 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. A Fine unmarked copy with Fine dustjacket which is not price clipped. xii + 209 pages. 57 illustrations. Foreword by The Rev. Lord Soper. During the First and Second World Wars thousands of men and women followed the promptings of their conscience and refused the call to arms. Reviled, starved and beaten, theirs was a battle of conscience. They came from all classes and backgrounds, from apprentice piano-maker Alfred Evans to composer Michael Tippett, cavalry officer turned anarchist David Spreckley and Paul Eddington. In the First World War 73 conscientious objectors died as a result of their treatment, hundreds were imprisoned, and a mere handful were given exemption. During the Second World War many more conscientious objectors were given exemption, some on condition that another sort of war service was performed. This was not acceptable to all conscientious objectors, and men like Leonard Bird were prepared to go to prison - in his case three times- rather than compromise their beliefs. 23. Fine/Fine.
Keywords: Conscientious Objectors in World War One and Two, Michael Tippett, Social History 0750907401
Price: GBP 12.00 = appr. US$ 17.14 Seller: Goldring Books
- Book number: 008710
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