
A People's History of World War II
by Favreau, MarcBuy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Series Preface | p. ix |
Editor's Note | p. xi |
Beginnings Pearl Harbor | p. 1 |
Photo Essay "Pearl Harbor Photographs" | p. 3 |
"December 7,1941": Studs Terkel interviews American witnesses to the Japanese attacks | p. 5 |
"December 8,1941": Interviews with Japanese civilians and soldiers | p. 14 |
"Austin, Texas, December 9,1941": Man-on-the-street interview following the attack on Pearl Harbor | p. 23 |
The War in Europe | p. 31 |
"War": Historian Eric Hobsbawm reflects on the coming of the war | p. 33 |
"Flight": Elisabeth Freund, a German Jewish emigre, recounts her flight from Nazi Germany | p. 58 |
"A Turning Point": Studs Terkel interviews Mikhail Nikolaevich Alexeyev, Russian author and editor, about his experiences as a Soviet soldier on the Eastern Front | p. 77 |
"The Bombers and the Bombed": Studs Terkel interviews Eddie Costello and Ursula Bender about the Allied bombing of Frankfurt, Germany | p. 83 |
"Return to Auschwitz": Author and Holocaust survivor Primo Levi is interviewed as he returns to Auschwitz after forty years | p. 91 |
The US. Home Front | p. 103 |
"Trouble Coming": Nelson Peery describes the profound racial tensions that erupted in Southern states as African American soldiers mobilized in large numbers | p. 105 |
"A Sunday Evening": Studs Terkel interviews Peter Ota, an American-born Japanese man who served in the American military | p. 115 |
Photo Essay "Manzanar": Ansel Adams photographs an internment camp for Japanese Americans | p. 121 |
"Statement on Entering Prison": David Dellinger issues a political statement on his status as a conscientious objector in 1943 | p. 123 |
"Rosie": Studs Terkel interviews a woman who went to work in a factory during the war | p. 128 |
Photo Essay "Rosie the Riveter": From the Office of War Information archive | p. 135 |
"Confronting the Holocaust": Historian David Wyman interviews Hillel Kook, who led the effort in the U.S. to push American leaders to rescue European Jews | p. 137 |
Image Essay "Dr. Seuss Goes to War": Propaganda cartoons from Theodore Geisel on the Nazi menace | p. 161 |
The Pacific War | p. 163 |
"The Slaughter of an Army": Osawa Masatsugu relates his experiences as a Japanese soldier in New Guinea in 1943 | p. 165 |
"Tales of the Pacific": Studs Terkel interviews E.B. (Sledgehammer) Sledge about the American experience of war in the Pacific | p. 177 |
"An American Revolutionary": Nelson Peery relates his experiences as an African American soldier in the fight against Japan | p. 186 |
"One World or None": An excerpt from public statements by leading atomic scientists, warning of the dangers of nuclear weapons | p. 192 |
"The Atomic Bomb": Studs Terkel talks with a nuclear physicist who worked on the Manhattan Project | p. 205 |
"A Terrible New Weapon": Firsthand witnesses of Ground Zero at Hiroshima and Nagasaki | p. 219 |
Postwar | p. 235 |
"The War (Rough Draft)": An account of Paris after the German occupation, by Marguerite Duras | p. 237 |
"Refugees": Poet Charles Simic remembers a life in transit in the aftermath of the German surrender | p. 260 |
Sources | p. 273 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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