What We Are Reading Today: The Hidden Victims: Civilian Casualties of the Two World Wars

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Updated 06 September 2024
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What We Are Reading Today: The Hidden Victims: Civilian Casualties of the Two World Wars

  • By one reputable estimate, 9.7 million civilians and 9 million combatants died in World War I, while World War II killed 25.5 million civilians and 15 million combatants

Author: Cormac O Grada

Soldiers have never been the only casualties of wars. But the armies that fought World Wars I and II killed far more civilians than soldiers as they countenanced or deliberately inflicted civilian deaths on a mass scale. By one reputable estimate, 9.7 million civilians and 9 million combatants died in World War I, while World War II killed 25.5 million civilians and 15 million combatants.

But in The Hidden Victims, Cormac O Grada argues that even these shocking numbers are almost certainly too low.

Carefully evaluating all the evidence available, he estimates that the wars cost not 35 million but some 65 million civilian lives—nearly two-thirds of the 100 million total killed. Indeed, he shows that war-induced famines alone may have killed.

 


What We Are Reading Today: Rodin’s Egypt by Bénédicte Garnier

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What We Are Reading Today: Rodin’s Egypt by Bénédicte Garnier

Celebrated as one of the fathers of modern European sculpture, Auguste Rodin (1840–1917) created expressive and emotive human bodies in works that abandoned narrative and embraced the subject and materiality of his medium.

While his revolutionary approach to the body broke from neoclassical tradition, he revered the works of antiquity, in which he saw the truest expressions of nature.

Rodin was particularly enthralled by the art of ancient Egypt, amassing a collection of more than 1,000 Egyptian objects. The book reveals the profound influence Egyptian art had on Rodin’s work.