Select your institution from the list provided, which will take you to your institution's website to sign in.Click Sign in through your institution.Shibboleth / Open Athens technology is used to provide single sign-on between your institution’s website and Oxford Academic. This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.Ĭhoose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses. If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. In this chapter, we will follow soldiers into the military through their service, and finally back home again, focusing on how illness figured into their life stories and tracing broad patterns over the course of the eighteenth century. This chapter and the following address war and its aftermath. As a massive engine of affliction, war had the power to pull soldiers and their families into dependency, leading them to call on government for protection and relief. With relentless persistence throughout the century, war removed healthy persons from households and towns and returned them injured, desperately ill, or chronically infirm. What effects did war have on households and towns that absorbed soldiers back into civilian society? Wartime sickness offers one approach to this problem. In the century that followed the Glorious Revolution, war insinuated itself into the social, economic, and political life of the region to an extraordinary degree. It would be hard to overestimate the importance of warfare in late seventeenth- and eighteenth-century New England. This chapter explores the domestic costs of war.
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