The Veterans' Tale
This is a unique account of the ways in which British veterans of the Second World War remembered, understood, and recounted their experiences of battle throughout the post-war period. Focusing on themes of landscape, weaponry, the enemy, and comradeship, Frances Houghton examines the imagery and language used by war memoirists to reconstruct and review both their experiences of battle and their sense of wartime self. Houghton also identifies how veterans' memoirs became significant sites of contest as former servicemen sought to challenge what they saw as unsatisfactory official, scholarly, and cultural representations of the Second World War in Britain. Her findings show that these memoirs are equally important both for the new light they shed on the memory and meanings of wartime military experience among British veterans, and for what they tell us about the cultural identity of military life-writing in post-war British society.
- Explains how Second World War veterans remembered, interpreted, and told their wartime experiences
- Examines military memoirs as a tool to review wartime experience
- Positions veteran memoirs as the guardians of memories of the Second World War, through which the writers actively sought to contest 'erroneous' representations of the war
Product details
January 2019Adobe eBook Reader
9781108756921
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Motive and the veteran-memoirist
- 2. Penning and publishing the veteran's tale
- 3. Landscape, nature, and battlefields
- 4. Machines, weapons, and protagonists
- 5. 'Distance', killing, and the enemy
- 6. Comradeship, leadership, and martial fraternity
- 7. Selfhood and coming of age in veteran memoir
- 8. History, cultural memory, and the veteran-memoirist
- Conclusion.