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ISBN: PB: 9780300226386

Yale University Press

March 2017

424 pp.

23.5x15.6 cm

16 black&white illus.

PB:
£11,99
QTY:

Categories:

Browned off and Bloody-Minded

The British Soldier Goes to War 1939-1945

More than three-and-a-half million men served in the British Army during the Second World War, the vast majority of them civilians who had never expected to become soldiers and had little idea what military life, with all its strange rituals, discomforts, and dangers, was going to be like. Alan Allport's rich and luminous social history examines the experience of the greatest and most terrible war in history from the perspective of these ordinary, extraordinary men, who were plucked from their peacetime families and workplaces and sent to fight for King and Country. Allport chronicles the huge diversity of their wartime trajectories, tracing how soldiers responded to and were shaped by their years with the British Army, and how that army, however reluctantly, had to accommodate itself to them. Touching on issues of class, sex, crime, trauma, and national identity, through a colorful multitude of fresh individual perspectives, the book provides an enlightening, deeply moving perspective on how a generation of very modern-minded young men responded to the challenges of a brutal and disorienting conflict.

About the Author

Alan Allport was born in Whiston, England, and grew up in East Yorkshire. He has a doctorate in history from the University of Pennsylvania and is currently a postdoctoral lecturer at Princeton.

Reviews

"A welcome social history that tracks the views of the British Soldiers, reluctant and otherwise, who were called up in the Second World War II" – Sue Baker, The Bookseller