Wartime - Understanding and Behaviour in the Second World War
The Second World War has been romanticized almost beyond recognition by the sentimental, the loony patriotic, the ignorant, and the bloodthirsty. In this study, Paul Fussell goes behind the familiar diplomacy and heroics of history to examine the blunders, petty tyrannies, inconveniences, and deprivations that are many British and American people's memory of the War. There are lively sections on the role of drinking, tobacco, and sex in the war and on the home front; on propaganda; about writers and magazines who recorded the war or who attempted to keep aloft literary standards in a difficult time; on wartime slang and graphic recollections of the nightmare of combat. It is a companion to Fussell's The Great War And Modern Memory. A brilliant psychological/ social study drawing heavily on war language....