Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and their Adversaries in World War II

Mark Johnston (Scotch College, Melbourne)

Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and their Adversaries in World War II
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
16 April 2000
Pages
238
ISBN
9780521782227

Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and their Adversaries in World War II

Mark Johnston (Scotch College, Melbourne)

Fighting the Enemy is about men with the job of killing each other. Based on the wartime writings of hundreds of Australian front-line soldiers during World War II, this powerful and resonant book contains many moving descriptions of high emotion and drama. Soldiers’ interactions with their enemies are central to war, and their attitudes to their adversaries are crucial to the way wars are fought. Yet few books look in detail at how enemies interpret each other. This book is an unprecedented and thorough examination of the way Australian combat soldiers interacted with troops from the four powers engaged in World War II: Germany, Italy, Vichy France and Japan. Each opponent has themes peculiar to it: the Italians were much ridiculed; the Germans were the most respected of enemies; the Vichy French were regarded with ambivalence; while the Japanese were the subject of much hostility, intensified by the real threat of occupation.

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