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Behind Enemy Lines: Gender, Passing and the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War


Behind Enemy Lines: Gender, Passing and the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War

Hardback by Pattinson, Juliette

Behind Enemy Lines: Gender, Passing and the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War

£85.00

ISBN:
9780719075698
Publication Date:
1 Nov 2007
Language:
English
Publisher:
Manchester University Press
Pages:
256 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 - 29 May 2024
Behind Enemy Lines: Gender, Passing and the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War

Description

Behind enemy lines is an examination of gender relations in wartime using the Special Operations Executive as a case study. Drawing on personal testimonies, in particular oral history and autobiography, as well as official records and film, it explores the extraordinary experiences of male and female agents who were recruited and trained by a British organisation and infiltrated into Nazi-Occupied France to encourage sabotage and subversion during the Second World War. With its original interpretation of a wealth of primary sources, it examines how these ordinary, law-abiding civilians were transformed into para-military secret agents, equipped with silent killing techniques and trained in unarmed combat. This fascinating, timely and engaging book is concerned with the ways in which the SOE veterans reconstruct their wartime experiences of recruitment, training, clandestine work and for some, their captivity, focusing specifically upon the significance of gender and their attempts to pass as French civilians. This examination of the agents of an officially-sponsored insurgent organisation makes a major contribution to British socio-cultural history, war studies and gender studies and will appeal to both the general reader, as well as to those in the academic community.

Contents

List of plates, figures and tables Abbreviations 1: Introduction: Reconstructing the Special Operations Executive 2: 'To pass as a native': Recruiting for operations in France 3: 'Taught how to play a part': Training agents for undercover work 4: 'A jittery business'?: Representations of anxiety in personal and filmic accounts 5: 'Living a different life': Performing 'heroic' and 'stoic' masculinities 6: 'The best disguise': Performing femininities for clandestine purposes 7: 'Pretending at once': Passing performances in captivity 8: 'So many happy memories': Demobilisation and the return to civvie street Bibliography Appendix: Biographies of interviewees Index

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