The project Brothers in Wounds has investigated the return to civilian life of servicemen who had been physically injured on the battlefields of the First World War. It has focused on Italy with a view, however, to unearth contacts, relationships and exchanges across borders.
Its examination of the “inter-war” period (1917-1939) has allowed to place the experiences of Italian disabled veterans into the wider European political context and has enabled to understand the extent to which the rise and consolidation of Fascism affected responses to disability in both Italian society and on the international stage.
This project has mobilized a wide range of primary sources (institutional documents, inter/national and local press, memoirs, etc.) and has integrated different historiographical approaches (social, cultural and transnational history) to bring to light the specific experiences of Italian disabled ex-servicemen. It has combined a range of scales of analysis, above and below the nation-state, thus examining local case studies, the national framework and transnational connections. This project has thus contributed to the comparative as well as to the transnational history of war disability in Italy and Europe.
This project has generally aimed to reflect upon the implications of the transition from war to peace and the reintegration of disabled veterans in post-WW1 Italy. More specifically, it has investigated the complex physical, psychological, and social challenges faced by disabled veterans in the inter-war era. This prompted some wider considerations on the same topics in contemporary debates in academic, medical and policy-making circles.