Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q15061465> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 65 of
65
with 100 triples per page.
- Q15061465 subject Q15346408.
- Q15061465 subject Q6816935.
- Q15061465 subject Q7130203.
- Q15061465 subject Q8788375.
- Q15061465 abstract "Shell shock was a term coined to describe the reaction of some soldiers in World War I to the trauma of battle. It was a reaction to the intensity of the bombardment and fighting that produced a helplessness appearing variously as panic and being scared, or flight, an inability to reason, sleep, walk or talk.During the War, the concept of shell shock was ill-defined. Cases of 'shell shock' could be interpreted as either a physical or psychological injury, or simply as a lack of moral fibre. While the term shell shock is no longer used in either medical or military discourse, it has entered into popular imagination and memory, and is often identified as the signature injury of the War.In World War II and thereafter, diagnosis of 'shell shock' was replaced by that of combat stress reaction, a similar but not identical response to the trauma of warfare and bombardment.".
- Q15061465 thumbnail Shellshock2.jpg?width=300.
- Q15061465 wikiPageExternalLink shellshock_01.shtml.
- Q15061465 wikiPageExternalLink rivers.htm.
- Q15061465 wikiPageExternalLink PMC1079301.
- Q15061465 wikiPageExternalLink Jones%202007%20-%20shell%20shock%20mtbi.pdf.
- Q15061465 wikiPageExternalLink Wessely_2006_Harry%20Farr.pdf.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q102728.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1051355.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1066004.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q11072.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1134368.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1138736.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q132568.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q142.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1482034.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q15346408.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q15439895.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q156223.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q1757359.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q192309.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q202387.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q2025.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q222595.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q223907.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q2568897.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q2581333.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q334984.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q349777.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q361.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q362.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q363729.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q408.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q4192707.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q426227.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q42844.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q4886455.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q510236.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q516446.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q543.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q588320.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q61198.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q671776.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q6816935.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q7130203.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q7308036.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q7867.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q827023.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q841743.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q86.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q8788375.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q919272.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q939416.
- Q15061465 wikiPageWikiLink Q951639.
- Q15061465 type Disease.
- Q15061465 type Thing.
- Q15061465 type Q12136.
- Q15061465 comment "Shell shock was a term coined to describe the reaction of some soldiers in World War I to the trauma of battle. It was a reaction to the intensity of the bombardment and fighting that produced a helplessness appearing variously as panic and being scared, or flight, an inability to reason, sleep, walk or talk.During the War, the concept of shell shock was ill-defined. Cases of 'shell shock' could be interpreted as either a physical or psychological injury, or simply as a lack of moral fibre.".
- Q15061465 label "Shell shock".
- Q15061465 seeAlso Q4969484.
- Q15061465 depiction Shellshock2.jpg.