Available Formats
Queen and Country: SameSex Desire in the British Armed Forces, 193945
By (Author) Emma Vickers
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
1st October 2015
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
306.766
Paperback
208
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Queen and country examines the complex intersection between same-sex desire and the British Armed Forces during the Second World War. It illuminates how men and women lived, loved and survived in an institution which, at least publicly, was unequivocally hostile towards same-sex activity within its ranks. Queen and country also tells a story of selective remembrance and the politics of memory, exploring specifically why same-sex desire continues to be absent from the historical record of the war. In examining this absence, and the more intimate minutiae of cohesion, homosociability and desire, this study pushes far beyond traditional military history in order to cast new light on one of the most widely discussed conflicts of the twentieth century. -- .
'This empirically rich study adds a new chapter to the history of homosexuality in the context of the Second World War. Fascinating in its detail, Queen and country shows how the very attempt to regulate same-sex intimacies and desires gave rise to new sexual identities and queer communities.'
Laura Doan, author of Disturbing Practices: History, Sexuality, and Womens Experience of Modern War|Vickers neatly embeds the empirical detail the bulk of the book under review within the wider corpus on the subject of gender and history and she is to be commended for an excellent, scholarly study that will surely propel further scholarship., Matthew Hughes, War in History 21(3), Book Review: Queen and Country: Same-Sex Desire in the British Armed Forces, 1939-1945 by Emma Vickers, 4 June 2014
Emma Vickers has produced a rich and humane study of World War Two service personnel which significantly expands our understanding of gay people and the reaction of ordinary people to them before gay lib in the 1970s.
Brian Dempsey, James Morgan Brown Review
Emma Vickers is Senior Lecturer in History at Liverpool John Moores University