Event details
Mar
28
Comparing Societies in Wartime: Civilians and Downed Airmen in Second World War Europe
Between 1940 and 1945, more than 100,000 airmen were shot down over Europe, a few thousand of whom survived and avoided being arrested. "When Men Fell from the Sky" is a comparative history of the treatment of these airmen by civilians in France, Germany and Britain. By studying the situation on the ground, Claire Andrieu shows how these encounters reshaped societies at a local level. She reveals how the fall of France in 1940 may have concealed an insurrection nipped in the bud, that the People's War in Britain was not merely a myth, and that in Germany, the racial community of the people had in fact become a social reality with Allied airmen increasingly subjected to lynching from 1943 onwards. By considering why the treatment of these airmen contrasted so strongly in these countries, Andrieu sheds new light on how civilians reacted when confronted with the war at home.
Speakers
Claire Andrieu, Professor emerita, Centre d'histoire de Sciences Po, Paris
Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.
Date
March 28, 2024Time
4:30 p.m.Location
Louis A. Simpson International Building, A71Audience
University Sponsors
Center for Collaborative History and Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination