Long a topic of historical interest, wartime captivity has over the past decade taken on new urgency as an object of study. Transnational by its very nature, captivity’s historical significance extends far beyond the front lines, ultimately inextricable from the histories of mobilization, nationalism, colonialism, law, and a host of other related subjects. This wide-ranging volume brings together an international selection of scholars to trace the contours of this evolving research agenda, offering fascinating new perspectives on historical moments that range from the early days of the Great War to the arrival of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.
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Acknowledgements
List of Figures
Acronyms
Editors’ Introduction: Prisoners of War in the Twentieth Century: A Problematic at the Crossroads of Histories and Disciplines
Anne-Marie Pathé and Fabien Théofilakis
Introduction: War Imprisonment in the Twentieth Century
John Horne
PART I: CAMP SYSTEMS, INTERNATIONAL LAW AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION
Introduction
Jorg Echternkamp
Chapter 1. International Law and Western Front Prisoners in the First World War
Heather Jones
Chapter 2. German Treatment of Jewish Prisoners of War in the Second World War
Rüdiger Overmans
Chapter 3. “All things are possible for him who believes” (Mark, 9, 23): The Regulation of Religious Life in Prisoner of War Camps in the Second World War
Delphine Debons
Chapter 4. From Allies to Enemies: Prisoners of the Third Reich in Italy – The Case of the Rimini Enclave 1945-1947
Patrizia Dogliani
Chapter 5. The Other Point of View of …(1) the Lawyer
Jean-Paul Pancracio
PART II: LANGUAGES OF CAPTIVITY: BODIES AND MINDS BEHIND THE BARBED WIRE
Introduction
Annette Becker
Chapter 6. Thresholds and Transgressions: Offences against Social Norms in the Internment Camps of the First World War
Iris Rachamimov
Chapter 7. Half-Naked Nazis: Masculinity and Gender in German POW Camps in the USA during the Second World War
Matthias Reiss
Chapter 8. Fernand Braudel as Prisoner in Germany: Confronting the Long-Term and the Present Time
Peter Schöttler
Chapter 9. “The trio is growing like a piece of asparagus”: Hans Gál and the Trio of the Huyton Suite
Suzanne Snizek
Chapter 10. The Other Point of View of (II) … the Ethnologist: The Internment of Spanish Republicans in French Camps: The Ethnologist Caught in the Net of Memory
Véronique Moulinié
PART III: RELATIONS BETWEEN CAPTIVITY AND SOCIETY: FROM CAPTURE TO LIBERATION
Introduction: Beyond the Wire: Interactions between Prison Camps and Their Surrounding Communities
Felicia Yap
Chapter 11. Perceptions of Axis Captives in the British Isles, 1939-1948
Bob Moore
Chapter 12. “Voluntary” Captivity: Russian Prisoners of War in Switzerland, 1942-1945
Georg Kreis
Chapter 13. “Rodolph – How Nice he is!”: Contacts between German Prisoners of War and French Civilians, 1944-1948
Fabien Théofilakis
Chapter 14. The Other Point of View of … (III): The Boundaries between Friends and Foes
Stéphane Dufoix
PART IV: CAPTIVITY AND COLONIAL ISSUES: THE FRENCH EXAMPLE
Introduction
Pierre Journoud
Chapter 15. War-time Internment of Algerians in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: For a History of Forms of Captivity in the Long Term
Sylvie Thénault
Chapter 16. Helping “Our” Prisoners: Philanthropic Mobilisation for French Colonial Prisoners of War, 1940-1942
Sarah Ann Frank
Chapter 17. French Guards for French Colonial Prisoners of War in German Captivity, 1943-44: An Anomaly in International Affairs
Raffael Scheck
Chapter 18. Why Release the Prisoners?: The Algerian Army of National Liberation
Raphaëlle Branche
Chapter 19. The Other Point of View of … (IV): Armed Conflict and Captivity: Aspects of Change between the Twentieth and the Twenty-First Centuries
Jérôme Larché
PART V: CAPTIVITY IN WARTIME: FROM ONE CENTURY TO ANOTHER (20th-21st centuries)
Chapter 20. Round Table Discussion
By Way of Conclusion
Henry Rousso
Bibliography
Index of Individuals
Index of Organizations
Index of Places
Index of Themes
关于作者
Helen Mc Phail is a non-fiction translator specialising in the social history of the First World War period and other conflicts of the twentieth century. She is also the author of The Long Silence, a brief account of civilian life in occupied northern France in 1914-1918.