World War II
By (Author) G. Kurt Piehler
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th October 2007
United States
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
940.53
Hardback
248
There are countless books detailing the history of World War II, but none has examined the differences among soldiers's experiences based on their service branch's culture. Based on extensive oral history interviews with the men and women who served during this war, G. Kurt Piehler has discovered that the U.S. Navy tended to be hierarchical, especially on large ships; and in contrast, the Army Air Force remained a relatively loose organization, with more frequent fraternization among officers and enlisted personnel. Although racial tensions were not absent from the Marines, the elite ethos of this branch mitigated the harsh racism of many white Marines toward their African American comrades. In the Army, there was no one representative soldier's experience in the war, given the sheer size and diversity of the Army's missions in this conflict, including sharp differences between the Asian and European war experiences. Piehler draws heavily on the oral histories he conducted for the Rutgers Oral History Archives of World War II and the Center for the Study of War and Society to provide a rich and varied look at the experiences of the men and women of World War II, in their own words. The book also includes a timeline to put dates and events in better perspective; a comprehensive, topically arranged bibliography; and a thorough index.
Piehler (history, Rutgers U.) describes the daily lives of those who served in the US Navy, Army, Army Air Corps or Marines or were prisoners of war.His collections of letters, memoirs and reports from soldiers is reverent, funny and poignant. * SciTech Book News *
G. Kurt Piehler is Professor of History at University of Tennessee. He is the author or editor of a number of books, including Americans at War, Major Problems in American Military History, and Remembering War in the American Way.