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The Flyer British Culture And The Royal Air Force 19391945 Martin Francis

  • SKU: BELL-1391990
The Flyer British Culture And The Royal Air Force 19391945 Martin Francis
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Flyer British Culture And The Royal Air Force 19391945 Martin Francis instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.91 MB
Pages: 287
Author: Martin Francis
ISBN: 9780199277483, 0199277486
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

The Flyer British Culture And The Royal Air Force 19391945 Martin Francis by Martin Francis 9780199277483, 0199277486 instant download after payment.

Between 1939 and 1945, the British public was spellbound by the martial endeavors and dashing style of the young men of the RAF, especially those with silvery fabric wings sewn above the breast pocket of their glamorous slate-blue uniform. Martin Francis provides the first scholarly study of the place of ''the flyer'' in British culture during the Second World War. Examining the lives of RAF personnel, and their popular representation in literary and cinematic texts, he illuminates broader issues of gender, social class, national and racial identities, emotional life, and the creation of a national myth in twentieth-century Britain. In particular, Francis argues that the flyer's relationship to fear, aggression, loss of his comrades, bodily dismemberment, and psychological breakdown reveals broader ambiguities surrounding the dominant understandings of masculinity in the middle decades of the century. Despite his star appeal, cultural representations of the flyer encompassed both the gentle, chivalrous warrior and the uncompromising agent of destruction. Paying particular attention to the romantic universe of wartime aircrew, Francis reveals the extraordinary contrasts of their daily lives: dicing with death in the sky one moment, before sitting down to lunch with wives and children in the next. Male and female experiences during the war were not polarized and antithetical, but were complementary and interrelated, a conclusion which has implications for the history of gender in modern Britain that reach well beyond either the specialized military culture of the wartime RAF or the chronological parameters of the Second World War.

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