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What Soldiers Do
Mary Louise Roberts
其他書名
Sex and the American GI in World War II France
出版
University of Chicago Press
, 2013
主題
Biography & Autobiography / Military
History / General
History / Europe / France
History / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / General
History / Military / United States
History / Wars & Conflicts / World War II / European Theater
History / United States / 20th Century
History / Social History
Psychology / Human Sexuality
ISBN
0226923118
9780226923116
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=hPglEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
How do you convince men to charge across heavily mined beaches into deadly machine-gun fire? Do you appeal to their bonds with their fellow soldiers, their patriotism, their desire to end tyranny and mass murder? Certainly—but if you’re the US Army in 1944, you also try another tack: you dangle the lure of beautiful French women, waiting just on the other side of the wire, ready to reward their liberators in oh so many ways.
That’s not the picture of the Greatest Generation that we’ve been given, but it’s the one Mary Louise Roberts paints to devastating effect in
What Soldiers Do
. Drawing on an incredible range of sources, including news reports, propaganda and training materials, official planning documents, wartime diaries, and memoirs, Roberts tells the fascinating and troubling story of how the US military command systematically spread—and then exploited—the myth of French women as sexually experienced and available. The resulting chaos—ranging from flagrant public sex with prostitutes to outright rape and rampant venereal disease—horrified the war-weary and demoralized French population. The sexual predation, and the blithe response of the American military leadership, also caused serious friction between the two nations just as they were attempting to settle questions of long-term control over the liberated territories and the restoration of French sovereignty.
While never denying the achievement of D-Day, or the bravery of the soldiers who took part,
What Soldiers Do
reminds us that history is always more useful—and more interesting—when it is most honest, and when it goes beyond the burnished beauty of nostalgia to grapple with the real lives and real mistakes of the people who lived it.