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E-raamat: Outcast Europe: Refugees and Relief Workers in an Era of Total War 1936-48

(University of South Wales, UK), ,
  • Formaat: 344 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Nov-2011
  • Kirjastus: Continuum Publishing Corporation
  • ISBN-13: 9781441146830
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  • Formaat: 344 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Nov-2011
  • Kirjastus: Continuum Publishing Corporation
  • ISBN-13: 9781441146830

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The period of the 'long' Second World War (1936-1948) was marked by mass movements of diverse populations: 60 million people either fled or were forced from their homes. This book considers the Spanish Republicans fleeing Franco's Spain in 1939, the French civilians trying to escape the Nazi invasion in 1940, and the millions of people displaced or expelled by the forces of Hitler's Third Reich. Throughout this period state and voluntary organisations were created to take care of the homeless and the displaced. National organisations dominated until the end of the war; afterwards, international organisations - the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency and the International Refugee Organisation - were formed to deal with what was clearly an international problem. Using case studies of displaced people and of relief workers, this book is unique in placing such crises at the centre rather than the margins of wartime experience, making the work nothing less than an alternative history of the Second World War.

Arvustused

The aim of this book is to reconsider the complex journeys undertaken by European refugees and the relationships between refugees and relief workers... The research...is impressive. -- Peter Gatrell, University of Manchester, UK * European History Quarterly *

Muu info

An original perspective on the experience of refugees and relief workers.
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Abbreviations xiv
Introduction: Writing Refugees 1(26)
The Inner World of the Refugee
1(4)
Defining Refugees
5(6)
Writing Refugees
11(11)
Historians and Refugees
22(1)
The Great Journey: Transformative Movement and the Second World War
23(4)
PART 1 THE MIDNIGHT OF THE CENTURY
27(104)
1 The Retirada: Spanish Republican Refugees, 1939
29(25)
The Refugees' War
29(2)
Images of France
31(3)
Organizing the Retirada
34(6)
The French Reception: Watching the War
40(2)
The French Reception: Organizing Welfare
42(5)
The French Reception: The Spanish Experience
47(2)
The French Reception: Controlling the Flood
49(4)
Conclusion
53(1)
2 At the Limits of the Nation State: French Evacuations, 1939-1940
54(22)
Planning Evacuation
55(4)
Evacuation in Wartime
59(3)
Preparing for the Evacuees
62(2)
Evacuation Stories
64(3)
Reception and a New Life
67(5)
Alsace and Lorraine after the Evacuation
72(2)
Conclusion
74(2)
3 The Exodus: French Internal Refugees, 1940
76(27)
The Broken Hinge
77(3)
May 1940
80(3)
Soldiers and Civilians: Encounters on the Road
83(8)
Images of the Crowd: The Mindless Underworld
91(2)
Making Sense of the Exode
93(5)
Solidarity on the Road
98(3)
Conclusion
101(2)
4 After the Exodus: Return, Expulsion and Escape
103(28)
The Challenges of Return
104(7)
Returning Home
111(5)
Other Journeys: Continuing Southwards
116(4)
Other Journeys: `Visa: A Hundred-Act Vexation'
120(3)
A Second Exode? The Expulsions of Alsatians and Mosellans
123(5)
Conclusion
128(3)
PART 2 FALSE DAWN
131(121)
5 Lessons Unlearned: Wartime Debates and the Creation of UNRRA
135(27)
Ending Another War
135(4)
Neutrality and Commitment: the Red Cross and UNRRA
139(1)
Planning UNRRA
140(3)
Criticizing UNRRA, Defending UNRRA
143(3)
Recording UNRRA: Beyond Bureaucracy
146(2)
Joining UNRRA
148(4)
UNRRA at Granville
152(7)
Zones and Organizations
159(1)
Conclusion
160(2)
6 Into Darkest Germany
162(31)
Travelling into Germany
164(8)
Finding the Camps
172(1)
Documents and DPs
173(3)
The Status of the Relief Worker
176(3)
Frauleins, Girls and Ladies: Women Relief Workers
179(4)
Requisitioning, Scrounging and the Black Market
183(3)
Helping the People Help Themselves
186(2)
Dedication and Commitment
188(3)
Conclusion
191(2)
7 In the Camps
193(30)
The Politics of Empathy
194(6)
The Politics of Critique
200(9)
A Liberation that was not a Liberation
209(2)
DPs and Nationality
211(1)
Protests, Initiatives and National Resurgence
212(8)
DPs and Relief Workers
220(1)
Conclusion
221(2)
8 Other Paths: Returning to Nationhood
223(29)
Returning to Poland
224(9)
`Returning' to Israel
233(18)
Conclusion
251(1)
Conclusion 252(5)
Notes 257(44)
Bibliography 301(26)
Index 327
Laure Humbert is a research assistant at the University of Glamorgan, UK. Dr Fiona Reid is Lecturer at the University of Glamorgan. Her research areas include the social history of WWI and the remembrance and commemoration of war. Sharif Gemie is Reader in History at the University of Glamorgan, UK. He has published widely on modern European history and recent published books include French Revolutions 1815 - 1914: An Introduction (1999) and French Muslims: New Voices in Contemporary France (2010).