Prison Journal, 1940-1945

Prison Journal, 1940-1945
Title Prison Journal, 1940-1945 PDF eBook
Author Edouard Daladier
Publisher Routledge
Pages 328
Release 2022-02-23
Genre History
ISBN 100030812X

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Even after fifty years, and in spite of the reams of documents now available,it remains difficult-especially in France-to form an objective view of what things were like in the period between the wars and in 1940.The greater, the swifter, the more unexpected the disaster, the less people are willing to deal with it squarely. Once a certain threshold of suffering,shame, and humiliation is reached, actual facts become unimportant,analyses become bothersome. History falls prey to myth and rumor.People refuse to hear any more, but they still need someone to blame. In France, the strangest of bedfellows have come to speak about it in one voice, and the good people have remained mute.

Prison journal, 2940-1945

Prison journal, 2940-1945
Title Prison journal, 2940-1945 PDF eBook
Author Edouard Daladier
Publisher
Pages 367
Release 1995
Genre France
ISBN

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Prison Journal 1940-1945

Prison Journal 1940-1945
Title Prison Journal 1940-1945 PDF eBook
Author Edouard Daladier
Publisher
Pages 376
Release 2019-09-13
Genre France
ISBN 9780367284268

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Even after fifty years, and in spite of the reams of documents now available,it remains difficult-especially in France-to form an objective view of what things were like in the period between the wars and in 1940.The greater, the swifter, the more unexpected the disaster, the less people are willing to deal with it squarely. Once a certain threshold of suffering,shame, and humiliation is reached, actual facts become unimportant,analyses become bothersome. History falls prey to myth and rumor.People refuse to hear any more, but they still need someone to blame. In France, the strangest of bedfellows have come to speak about it in one voice, and the good people have remained mute.

A Woman's Prison Journal

A Woman's Prison Journal
Title A Woman's Prison Journal PDF eBook
Author Luise Rinser
Publisher Schocken Books Incorporated
Pages 168
Release 1987
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN

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"In 1944, the young writer Luise Rinser - who was neither Jewish nor Communist - was denounced by a 'friend', arrested for high treason, and sent to the women's prison at Traunstein in Bavaria. This book is the diary she kept, secretly, while she awaited an almost certain death sentence. Besides being an eloquent testament to the strength of the human spirit, it is a fascinating document of prison life under the Nazis - a world which, for all its harshness, was vastly different from the forced labor camps and the death camps."--Jacket.

Prison Journal

Prison Journal
Title Prison Journal PDF eBook
Author Luise Rinser
Publisher
Pages 160
Release 1987
Genre Authors, German
ISBN 9780140112030

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Prison Diary

Prison Diary
Title Prison Diary PDF eBook
Author Alfred Hassler
Publisher
Pages 238
Release 1944
Genre Conscientious objectors
ISBN

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The hand written journal of a conscientious objector jailed in the Lewisburg Penitentiary in World War II. The journal covers the period September 7, 1944 through November 17, 1944. The journal addendum extends from November 29, 1944 through January 30, 1945.

The French empire at War, 1940–1945

The French empire at War, 1940–1945
Title The French empire at War, 1940–1945 PDF eBook
Author Martin Thomas
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 317
Release 2017-03-01
Genre History
ISBN 1526121433

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The French empire at war draws on original research in France and Britain to investigate the history of the divided French empire – the Vichy and the Free French empires – during the Second World War. What emerges is a fascinating story. While it is clear that both the Vichy and Free French colonial authorities were only rarely masters of their own destiny during the war, preservation of limited imperial control served them both in different ways. The Vichy government exploited the empire in an effort to withstand German-Italian pressure for concessions in metropolitan France and it was key to its claim to be more than the mouthpiece of a defeated nation. For Free France too, the empire acquired a political and symbolic importance which far outweighed its material significance to the Gaullist war effort. As the war progressed, the Vichy empire lost ground to that of the Free French, something which has often been attributed to the attraction of the Gaullist mystique and the spirit of resistance in the colonies. In this radical new interpretation, Thomas argues that it was neither of these. The course of the war itself, and the initiatives of the major combatant powers, played the greatest part in the rise of the Gaullist empire and the demise of Vichy colonial control.