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Just to let you know I'm still alive : postcards from New Zealanders during the First World War / Glenn Reddiex.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Wellington, N.Z. : Grantham House, 2015.Description: 184 pagesISBN:
  • 9781869341275
Subject(s): Summary: This book takes the reader on a journey into the colourful world of the picture postcard duringWorldWar during World War One when the form of communicating was to mail a postcard with a message on the reverse side to a loved one serving on the battle fields of Europe. They were the emails of yesteryear, the economic way to communicate with family and friends across the miles. When war was declared in 1914, postcards took on a more meaningful purpose on a scale not seen before. Beyond their heart-fifi lled personal messages to and from the battlefront, postcards also became a patriotic and propaganda tool. The Dominion of New Zealand was quick to rally and answer the call to serve King and Country and it was not long before New Zealand publishers were producing original works by New Zealand artists and photographers for the local market. They were cherished as prized possessions for their photographs and art and became collectables in private postcard collections. These wonderful and thought provoking postcards with their handwritten messages give a poignant insight into the life and times in New Zealand during the Great War.at War.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Non-Fiction - New Zealand Non-Fiction - New Zealand Waimate Non-Fiction Non Fiction 940.393 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan Not for loan a00694130

This book takes the reader on a journey into the colourful world of the picture postcard duringWorldWar during World War One when the form of communicating was to mail a postcard with a message on the reverse side to a loved one serving on the battle fields of Europe.
They were the emails of yesteryear, the economic way to communicate with family and friends across the miles. When war was declared in 1914, postcards took on a more meaningful purpose on a scale not seen before. Beyond their heart-fifi lled personal messages to and from the battlefront, postcards also became a patriotic and propaganda tool. The Dominion of New Zealand was quick
to rally and answer the call to serve King and Country and it was not long before New Zealand
publishers were producing original works by New Zealand artists and photographers for the local
market. They were cherished as prized possessions for their photographs and art and became collectables in private postcard collections. These wonderful and thought provoking postcards with their handwritten messages give a poignant insight into the life and times in New Zealand during the Great War.at War.

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