Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace: Captivity, Homecoming and Memory in World War II

Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace: Captivity, Homecoming and Memory in World War II

Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace: Captivity, Homecoming and Memory in World War II

Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace: Captivity, Homecoming and Memory in World War II

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Overview

Millions of servicemen of the belligerent powers were taken prisoner during World War II. Until recently, the popular image of these men has been framed by tales of heroic escape or immense suffering at the hands of malevolent captors. For the vast majority, however, the reality was very different. Their history, both during and after the War, has largely been ignored in the grand narratives of the conflict. This collection brings together new scholarship, largely based on sources from previously unavailable Eastern European or Japanese archives. Authors highlight a number of important comparatives. Whereas for the British and Americans held by the Germans and Japanese, the end of the war meant a swift repatriation and demobilization, for the Germans, it heralded the beginning of an imprisonment that, for some, lasted until 1956. These and many more moving stories are revealed here for the first time.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781845201562
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Publication date: 02/01/2005
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.69(d)

About the Author

Dr. Bob Moore is Reader in Modern History, University of Sheffield. He is also a co-author of British Empire and its Italian Prisoners of War, 1940-1947. Barbara Hately-Broad holds a PhD from the University of Sheffield and now works in Adult Education

Table of Contents

Prisoners of War, Prisoners of Peace—Edited by Bob Moore and Barbara Hately-Broad
Overview—Pieter Lagrou
The Repatriation of POWs at the End of Hostilities—Rudiger Overmans
Prisoners and their Captors
British Perceptions of Italian Prisoners-of-War, 1940-1947—Bob Moore
Hatred within Limits. German Prisoners of War and Polish Society 1945-1950—Jerzy Kochanowski
Japanese Deserters and Prisoners of War In the Battle of Okinawa—Hirofumi Hayashi
Re-Education
Re-educating the German Prisoners of War: Aims, Methods, Results and Memory in East and West Germany—Andreas Hilger
Antifascist Propaganda among Italian War Prisoners in the USSR. 1941-1946—Maria-Theresa Giusti
The Nucleus of a New German Ideology? The Re-education of German Prisoners of War in the United States during World War II—Matthias Reiss
Homecoming
Coping in Britain and France: A Comparison of Family Issues Affecting the Homecoming of Prisoners of War following the Second World War—Barbara Hately-Broad
The Unhomeliness of their Homeland: Japanese POWs in Siberia and their Returban to Postwar Japan—Yoshikuni Igarashi
After the Burma-Thailand Railway: The 'homecoming' of Dutch Prisoners of War—Mariska Van Bruggen
The Internment of Returbaning Soviet Prisoners of War after 1945—Pavel Polian
Memory
The Framing of Memory: The War Experience of German POWs in Psychiatric Records—Svenja Goltermann
Retaining Integrity? Sex, Race and Gender in Narratives of Western Women Detained by the Japanese in World War II—Christina Twomey
Australian Prisoners of War in Australian National Memory—Joan Beaumont

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