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Histories of the Unexpected not only presents a new way of thinking about the past, but also reveals the world around us as never before. Traditionally, World War II has been understood in a straightforward way but the period really comes alive if you take an unexpected approach to its history. Yes, battles, bombs and bravery all have a fascinating history... but so too do handkerchiefs, furniture, Mozart, insects, blood, mothers, suicide, darkness, cancer and puppets! Each of these subjects is equally fascinating in its own right, and each sheds new light on the traditional subjects and themes that we think we know so well.
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By the same authors
Histories of the Unexpected
In the same series
Histories of the Unexpected: The Tudors
Histories of the Unexpected: The Vikings
Histories of the Unexpected: The Romans
First published in Great Britain in 2019 by Atlantic Books,an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.
Copyright © Sam Willis and James Daybell, 2019
The moral right of Sam Willis and James Daybell to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
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A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Hardback ISBN: 978-1-78649-775-8
E-book ISBN: 978-1-78649-776-5
Printed in Great Britain
Atlantic Books
An Imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd
Ormond House
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www.atlantic-books.co.uk
For
Kate & Alice
Felix & Bea
A Personal Note
Acknowledgements
World War II: An Introduction
1. Blood
2. King Arthur
3. Cancer
4. Carrots
5. Mozart
6. Darkness
7. Cars
8. Pockets
9. Furniture
10. Mothers
11. Puppets
12. Cows
13. Handkerchiefs
14. Paperbacks
15. Gates
16. Zen Buddhism
17. Insects
18. Deafness
19. Suicide
20. Rubble
Selected Further Reading
Illustration Credits
Index
At Histories of the Unexpected, we believe that everything has a history – even the most unexpected of subjects – and that everything links together in unexpected ways.
We believe that the itch, crawling, clouds, lightning, zombies and zebras and holes and perfume and rubbish and mustard – each has a fascinating history of its own.
In this book we take this approach into the Second World War. You will find out here how the history of carrots is connected to victory; how the history of handkerchiefs is all to do with resistance; and how the history of pockets is all about emergencies.
To explore and enjoy subjects in this way will change not only how you think about the past, but also the present. It is enormously rewarding and we encourage you all to join in! Find us online at www.historiesoftheunexpected.com and on Twitter @UnexpectedPod – and do please get in touch.
This series of books is about sharing great research and new approaches to history. Our first acknowledgement, therefore, must go to all of those brilliant historians – professional and amateur – who are writing today and who are changing the way that we think about the past. You are all doing a fabulous job, and one which often goes unremarked and unrewarded. Thank you for your time, effort, energy and insight. We could not have written this book without you.
Since this book is intended for a wide and general audience, we have chosen not to publish with extensive footnotes. We acknowledge our indebtedness to fellow historians in the Selected Further Reading section at the end of the book, which is also intended as a spur to further research for our readers.
We would like to thank the many colleagues and friends who have generously offered ideas, guidance, support and sustenance, intellectual and otherwise: Darren Aoki, Harry Bennett, Anthony Caleshu, Lee Jane Giles, Jim Holland, the Lord John Russell; and among the twitterati, @HunterSJones, @RedLunaPixie, @KittNoir and @Kazza2014.
Collective thanks are also due to Dan Snow, Dan Morelle, Tom Clifford and the fabulous History Hit team for all their support and encouragement; as well as to Will Atkinson, James Nightingale, Kate Straker, Jamie Forrest, Gemma Wain and everyone at Atlantic Books.
We would also like to thank everyone (and there are hundreds of thousands of you) who has listened to the podcast or come to see one of our live events and been so charming and enthusiastic.
Most of all, however, we would like to thank our families, young and old, for everything they have done and continue to do, to cope with – of all things – a historian in their lives.
But we have created this book for you.
Sam and James
Isca – Escanceaster – Exeter
The Feast of St Benedict – 8-Dhū al-Qa‘dah 1440 – I.VII.MMXIX – 11 July 2019
J. Howard Miller’s ‘We Can Do It!’ poster from 1943
Between 1939 and 1945, some 100 million people became directly involved in a global conflict fought on a massive scale that involved more than thirty countries. The lives of countless millions more were indirectly affected. More than 60 million died, many of them civilians. Six million of those were Jews murdered in the Holocaust. Over 25 million are known to have been killed in the Soviet Union alone, and more than 15 million in China. All of this happened because the Axis powers of Germany, Italy and Japan were opposed by a conglomerate of nations known as the Allies and led by Britain, America, Russia and China; but during the course of the war, over sixty countries – at one stage or another – fought to oppose the Axis powers. At the same time, several states such as Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland and Turkey preferred to remain neutral.
It was the most devastating conflict the world has ever known, with the major powers harnessing their most deadly ideologies and technologies into a killing machine that included conventional weaponry alongside chemical and biological warfare, strategic bombing, genocide, starvation and massacres, and which culminated in the dropping of the atomic bomb.
The war was fought from the Arctic to the Antarctic, across seas and trade routes. It was fought on all fronts and in multiple arenas: in mainland Europe, throughout Asia, Africa and the Far East, as well as in the Mediterranean, the Middle East, the Pacific and the Atlantic. It was fought with boots and armoured tanks on the ground, carriers and destroyers at sea, bombers and fighters in the air, and with a whole host of ingenious devices utilized in the shadows of a secret war. It was fought in cities, villages, deserts, mountains and jungles, under the sea as well as on it. It was also fought in the mind, through propaganda, ideology and influence.
Outside of the main operational theatres, the war had far-reaching tentacles of influence on the economic and industrial output of each nation involved. The conflict was not experienced simply by the combatants in the field, air and oceans, but was also fought on the ‘home front’, where immeasurable contributions were made on all sides to the war effort – whether it was air-raid wardens administering first aid to a bleeding, blitzed city, or mothers mending, ‘making do’ and improvising family meals from meagre rations, or muddy-fingered gardeners fighting the war with a spade – literally digging for victory. This blurring of the boundaries between civilian and military had a profound impact on the way that people lived their everyday lives. It disconnected families and disrupted working conditions, pulling things apart, but at the same time forces working in the opposite direction drove people together in love and comradeship. The Second World War is certainly about death and loss, but it is also about life and gain.
The dates of the conflict are traditionally bookended by the German invasion of Poland, which led to the declaration of war by Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand against Germany in September 1939, and the surrender of Japan in September 1945. But a broader perspective that still focuses on military conflict might look to 1937 and the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War, or to 1936 and the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, or to 1935 with Italy’s invasion of Abyssinia, or even as far back as 1931 with the Japanese seizure of Manchuria. And in each and every case, diplomats and politicians fought their own wars before the actual fighting broke out – a time when pens were guns, and words bullets. The clearest example of this was during the period of appeasement before the outbreak of the Second World War, when for four long years between 1935 and 1939 a sequence of British prime ministers, leading an army of diplomats and politicians, fought desperately to contain the rise of fascism in Hitler’s Germany and Mussolini’s Italy. Throughout this period, Britain was militarizing in readiness, and many other powers were preparing for war.
When the war ended depended entirely on where you were. The war in Europe ended with VE (Victory in Europe) Day on 8 May 1945, which marked the unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany. It was not, however, until the next day that the German forces occupying the Channel Islands capitulated, and the war continued to be fought elsewhere in the world for many months. Japan surrendered on 15 August, bringing the war to an official end. This became known as VJ (Victory over Japan) Day or VP (Victory in the Pacific) Day. But despite these official declarations, some kept fighting – not knowing of their nations’ actions – and others continued to do so in spite of the peace. New wars, all born one way or another from the Second World War, broke out in Korea (1945), Vietnam (1945), Indonesia (1945), Iran (1945), the Philippines (1946), Greece (1946), Romania (1947), India (1947), Palestine (1947), Czechoslovakia (1948) and Burma (1948), some of which were not resolved for many years, and some of which have never been resolved – not least the Israeli-Palestine conflict, which began as a direct result of the war and the subsequent establishment by the United Nations of the Jewish state of Israel in Palestine. The Cold War of the 1950s – a long period of international brinksmanship and fighting – was also a direct result of the Second World War.
For those survivors whose wartime experiences were actually contained between 1939 and 1945, many continued to relive the war in their minds through the trauma they experienced. The war lodged like a splinter in their minds, profoundly affecting their beliefs, thoughts and behaviour for the rest of their lives. Over seventy years on, memories of the severity and sacrifice live on as the war is remembered and commemorated by those born long after it ended.
A war of such magnitude means that the Second World War is one of the best-documented periods in history. The conflict impacted upon almost every aspect of civilization, and an overwhelming body of evidence survives: official documents, informal writings, art, poetry, oral history, living testimony, artefacts, film, audio, architecture and archaeology. The mile upon mile of documentary evidence means we can forensically reconstruct military operations in precise detail; chart the technological development of munitions and machines; understand policy-making at the heart of the Third Reich; study the impact of popular propaganda from newspapers, newsreels and wireless reports; and we can also learn about children’s experiences of the war and the impact that the conflict had on countless aspects of society. The challenge for the historian, therefore, is not only to pick a topic but also to pick a way to explore that topic – as each different approach will raise and answer different questions. For this reason, the Second World War is something of a historical kaleidoscope: looked at like this you see one thing, like that you see another, and that constant process of discovery is what makes the period so absorbing.
The scale of the war’s evidence and its relative proximity in time also makes this a deeply personal war for many of us today. Countless families have their own private archives from the period, perhaps stored in a cupboard, perhaps stuffed in a box in the attic, perhaps displayed for all to see in a frame; you may not have formally noticed it, but the war inadvertently made historians and archivists out of millions of us. Survivors have their own memories, and the generations are still close enough for those who did not experience the war to be able to remember very clearly those who did – and their stories.
We were both born in the 1970s and remember grandparents who lived through the conflict, which makes the period particularly relevant and close for us – regardless of the fact that we are professional historians. James’s father was born midway through the war, and he has a collection of postcards from his own father, who was fighting on the continent; they were written in pencil and partially in code to avoid being censored. Sam has diaries, uniforms, medals, flags, weapons and photographs from his grandparents, all of whom experienced the war in unique ways; as well as his own collection of memories of talking to them about their experiences. Private collections such as these shed light on the experiences of so many, and can be found in the homes of countless families across the world.
The scale of the conflict and the extent of the surviving evidence also mean that the Second World War can be understood from a diverse range of viewpoints: historians have written about it from the perspective of nationality, race, religion, gender and sexual orientation. There is work on the experiences of children and the elderly and the disabled, and a whole range of occupations or other groups: those who fought, the pacifists who didn’t fight, and those who remained neutral; prisoners incarcerated for their nationality, faith, ethnicity or sexuality; medics and the wounded; volunteers, slaves, labourers and professionals; politicians and diplomats; entertainers, artists, authors, poets and composers; the cowardly and the courageous; the traumatized and anxious; the elated and the shamed.
Through such varied work, historians have been able to recreate the ‘lived experience’ of the war to see how the conflict played out in so many different minds. How did a Japanese soldier fighting on the front line in the jungles of Burma experience the war? Or a Japanese civilian living in the US or Canada, forced to spend the war in an internment camp? Or the pilot of a B-52 bomber dropping incendiary bombs on packed cities? Or a German mother of no fewer than twenty children, striving to raise a family ‘worthy’ of the German Reich? Or a Japanese father reading a letter from his only son, penned minutes before a mission in which he deliberately flew his plane into an enemy ship? Or an evacuee child taken from her parents and put on a train to the country during the worst of the Blitz? Each of these perspectives is unique in its own way, but cumulatively they build a complex picture of the war; a mosaic of glittering details.
Traditionally, the Second World War has been presented in a very straightforward way, concentrating on military campaigns, warfare and military technology, and following the well-known personalities, events and themes. We think, however, that the period comes alive if you take an unexpected approach to its history.
Yes, battles, bombs and bravery all have a fascinating history, but so too do handkerchiefs, furniture, Mozart, insects, blood, cars, mothers, King Arthur, gates, suicide, Zen Buddhism, cancer, puppets, pockets, cows, deafness, darkness, rubble and even carrots!
Each of these subjects is fascinating in its own right, and each also sheds new light on the traditional subjects and themes that we think we know so well.
Are you ready for an infusion of historical knowledge? Then let’s start with the history of blood…
Anti-Semitic article attacking Jewish kosher slaughter in Der Stürmer, Number 14, 1937
Blood is all about recruitment…
In rousing political speeches made prior to and during the course of the war, spilled blood was synonymous with the sacrifice that British troops made for the nation. In 1938, Neville Chamberlain famously returned from Munich, disembarked from his plane to massed crowds, waved a piece of paper and proclaimed that he had achieved ‘peace with honour. I believe it is peace for our time.’ The paper was the Anglo-German Declaration, signed by Chamberlain and Hitler, confirming the details of an agreement between Germany, Italy, France and Britain known as the Munich Pact, which permitted Nazi annexation of the Sudetenland in western Czechoslovakia. It was the culmination of Chamberlain’s policy of appeasement.