This edition of a work of the first of its kind to be published in
Australia in 2006 is an updated analysis of what happened to soldiers
who suffered psychologically in the First World War. Madness and the
Military compellingly revisits this long-ignored aspect of Australian
military history and suggests a link with so-called shell shock and
moral injury.
Hailed by experts as both compassionate and instrumental in opening a
whole new field of Australian history, it tries to make sense of that
forgotten generation of war veterans. It also effectively challenges a
number of long-cherished myths surrounding both the commemoration of
that war and the treatment of wartime psychological casualties.