Norway Fights on
Title | Norway Fights on PDF eBook |
Author | Henry Martin Jackson |
Publisher | |
Pages | 6 |
Release | 1942 |
Genre | |
ISBN |
Norway Fights!
Title | Norway Fights! PDF eBook |
Author | Hans Olav |
Publisher | |
Pages | 44 |
Release | 1942 |
Genre | Norway |
ISBN |
Norway's Role in the "new Order".
Title | Norway's Role in the "new Order". PDF eBook |
Author | Norske informasjonstjeneste i Amerika |
Publisher | |
Pages | 20 |
Release | 1942 |
Genre | Norway |
ISBN |
Folklore Fights the Nazis
Title | Folklore Fights the Nazis PDF eBook |
Author | Kathleen Stokker |
Publisher | Univ of Wisconsin Press |
Pages | 280 |
Release | 1997-02-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0299154432 |
Armed with jokes, puns, and cartoons, Norwegians tried to keep their spirits high and foster the Resistance by poking fun at the occupying Germans during World War II. Despite a 1942 ordinance mandating death for the ridicule of Nazi soldiers, Norwegians attacked the occupying Nazis and their Norwegian collaborators by means of anecdotes, quips, insinuating personal ads, children’s stories, Christmas cards, mock postage stamps, and symbolic clothing. In relating this dramatic story, Kathleen Stokker draws upon her many interviews with survivors of the Occupation and upon the archives of the Norwegian Resistance Museum and the University of Oslo. Central to the book are four “joke notebooks” kept by women ranging in age from eleven to thirty, who found sufficient meaning in this humor to risk recording and preserving it. Stokker also cites details from wartime diaries of three other women from East, West, and North Norway. Placing the joking in historical, cultural, and psychological context, Stokker demonstrates how this seemingly frivolous humor in fact contributed to the development of a resistance mentality among an initially confused, paralyzed, and dispirited population, stunned by the German invasion of their neutral country. For this paperback edition, Stokker has added a new preface offering a comparative view of resistance through humor in neighboring Denmark.
Norway at War
Title | Norway at War PDF eBook |
Author | Norske informasjonstjeneste i Amerika |
Publisher | |
Pages | 40 |
Release | 1942 |
Genre | Norway |
ISBN |
Norway
Title | Norway PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Buckley |
Publisher | |
Pages | 306 |
Release | 1952 |
Genre | Dieppe Raid, 1942 |
ISBN |
Hitler's Pre-emptive War
Title | Hitler's Pre-emptive War PDF eBook |
Author | Henrik O. Lunde |
Publisher | Casemate |
Pages | 616 |
Release | 2009-05-11 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1612000452 |
An “excellent” history of the often overlooked WWII campaign in which Hitler secured a vital resource lifeline for the Third Reich (Library Journal). After Hitler conquered Poland and was still fine-tuning his plans against France, the British began to exert control over the coastline of neutral Norway, an action that threatened to cut off Germany’s iron-ore conduit to Sweden and outflank from the start its hegemony on the Continent. The Germans responded with a dizzying series of assaults, using every tool of modern warfare developed in the previous generation. Airlifted infantry, mountain troops, and paratroopers were dispatched to the north, seizing Norwegian strongpoints while forestalling larger but more cumbersome Allied units. The German navy also set sail, taking a brutal beating at the hands of Britannia, but ensuring with its sacrifice that key harbors would be held open for resupply. As dive-bombers soared overhead, small but elite German units traversed forbidding terrain to ambush Allied units trying to forge inland. At Narvik, some six thousand German troops battled twenty thousand French and British until the Allies were finally forced to withdraw by the great disaster in France, which had then gotten underway. Henrik Lunde, a native Norwegian and former US Special Operations colonel, has written the most objective account to date of a campaign in which twentieth-century military innovation found its first fertile playing field.