Abstract
Since time immemorial, common people, philosophers, biologists and other scientists have mused about the materiality of the human being and its relationship to the inner world of men and women. Few, if any, thinkers have sought to view this issue through the prism of an army, its weaponry, the environment it shaped and the objects its soldiers used, cherished or robbed. Brandon M. Schechter is the first to embark upon this intellectual adventure. He explores the materiality of the Red Army at...
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