Available Formats
Outcast Europe: Refugees and Relief Workers in an Era of Total War 1936-48
By (Author) Dr Sharif Gemie
By (author) Laure Humbert
By (author) Dr Fiona Reid
Continuum Publishing Corporation
Continuum Publishing Corporation
17th November 2011
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Refugees and political asylum
Second World War
Modern warfare
305.906914
Hardback
344
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The period of the 'long' Second World War (1936-1948) was marked by mass movements of diverse populations: 60 million people either fled or were forced from their homes. This book considers the Spanish Republicans fleeing Franco's Spain in 1939, the French civilians trying to escape the Nazi invasion in 1940, and the millions of people displaced or expelled by the forces of Hitler's Third Reich. Throughout this period state and voluntary organisations were created to take care of the homeless and the displaced. National organisations dominated until the end of the war; afterwards, international organisations - the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency and the International Refugee Organisation - were formed to deal with what was clearly an international problem. Using case studies of displaced people and of relief workers, this book is unique in placing such crises at the centre rather than the margins of wartime experience, making the work nothing less than an alternative history of the Second World War.
The aim of this book is to reconsider the complex journeys undertaken by European refugees and the relationships between refugees and relief workers... The research...is impressive. -- Peter Gatrell, University of Manchester, UK * European History Quarterly *
Sharif Gemie is Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at the University of Glamorgan. He is the author of five books, and of over thirty articles in academic journals. He is currently researching Empire and the Second World War. Laure Humbert was a Research Assistant at the University of Glamorgan in 2007-10. She is currently a post-graduate at the University of Exeter, researching the administration of DPs in the French zone of occupied Germany.