Prisoners of the Home Front: German POWs and ""Enemy Aliens"" in Southern Quebec, 1940-46

Author:   Martin F. Auger
Publisher:   University of British Columbia Press
ISBN:  

9780774812238


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   05 December 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Prisoners of the Home Front: German POWs and ""Enemy Aliens"" in Southern Quebec, 1940-46


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Author:   Martin F. Auger
Publisher:   University of British Columbia Press
Imprint:   University of British Columbia Press
Weight:   0.460kg
ISBN:  

9780774812238


ISBN 10:   0774812230
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   05 December 2005
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Foreword / Jeffrey A. Keshen Preface 1 A History of Internment 2 Organizing and Developing Southern Quebec's Internment Operation 3 Life behind Barbed Wire 4 Labour Projects 5 Educational Programs 6 Canada's Internment Experience: A Home Front Victory Appendix Notes Bibliography Index

Reviews

Auger has written a readable narrative that uses insightful analysis grounded in primary research from a regional perspective. The book is highly recommended for general and specialist readers. -- Chris Madsen * International History Review XXVIII, 4 * The issue of the labour and re-education camps set up during World War II has been widely addressed over the last sixty years, but few works offer a strictly Canadian point of view, and even fewer focus on Quebec. Thus, Martin F. Auger’s work is most welcome. He describes the living conditions to which prisoners, mostly Germans and Italians, were subjected for several years, and explains the various reasons that drove Canadian authorities to set up such labour camps. … In short, Auger’s work is indispensable for anyone interested in Canada’s national war effort during the Second World War. -- Charles Létourneau * Canadian Army Journal, Vol.10.1 * The memoir material provides an ideal counterpoint to the basic history gleaned from the government sources, and the author weaves an excellent narrative from the various strands involved. …In his recommendation of this book, my colleague Kent Fedorowich describes it as ‘the benchmark for the future study of Canada’s … history as a captor power during the Second World War’. I would go further and say that in several respects it sets benchmarks for all future regional and local studies of prisoners of war and internees, be they in Canada or elsewhere. -- Bob Moore, University of Sheffield * War in History, Issue 14-4 * Prisoners on the Home Front sheds some much needed light on an under-represented topic in Second World War historiography. … This book has forged a new path for the study of Canadian internment camps during the Second World War. -- A.C. * Canadian Military History, Spring 2008 *


Prisoners on the Home Front sheds some much needed light on an under-represented topic in Second World War historiography. ... This book has forged a new path for the study of Canadian internment camps during the Second World War. -- A.C. * Canadian Military History, Spring 2008 * Auger has written a readable narrative that uses insightful analysis grounded in primary research from a regional perspective. The book is highly recommended for general and specialist readers. -- Chris Madsen * International History Review XXVIII, 4 * The issue of the labour and re-education camps set up during World War II has been widely addressed over the last sixty years, but few works offer a strictly Canadian point of view, and even fewer focus on Quebec. Thus, Martin F. Auger's work is most welcome. He describes the living conditions to which prisoners, mostly Germans and Italians, were subjected for several years, and explains the various reasons that drove Canadian authorities to set up such labour camps. ... In short, Auger's work is indispensable for anyone interested in Canada's national war effort during the Second World War. -- Charles Letourneau * Canadian Army Journal, Vol.10.1 * The memoir material provides an ideal counterpoint to the basic history gleaned from the government sources, and the author weaves an excellent narrative from the various strands involved. ...In his recommendation of this book, my colleague Kent Fedorowich describes it as 'the benchmark for the future study of Canada's ... history as a captor power during the Second World War'. I would go further and say that in several respects it sets benchmarks for all future regional and local studies of prisoners of war and internees, be they in Canada or elsewhere. -- Bob Moore, University of Sheffield * War in History, Issue 14-4 *


The issue of the labour and re-education camps set up during World War II has been widely addressed over the last sixty years, but few works offer a strictly Canadian point of view, and even fewer focus on Quebec. Thus, Martin F. Auger's work is most welcome. He describes the living conditions to which prisoners, mostly Germans and Italians, were subjected for several years, and explains the various reasons that drove Canadian authorities to set up such labour camps. ... In short, Auger's work is indispensable for anyone interested in Canada's national war effort during the Second World War. -- Charles Letourneau Canadian Army Journal, Vol.10.1 The memoir material provides an ideal counterpoint to the basic history gleaned from the government sources, and the author weaves an excellent narrative from the various strands involved. ...In his recommendation of this book, my colleague Kent Fedorowich describes it as 'the benchmark for the future study of Canada's ... history as a captor power during the Second World War'. I would go further and say that in several respects it sets benchmarks for all future regional and local studies of prisoners of war and internees, be they in Canada or elsewhere. -- Bob Moore, University of Sheffield War in History, Issue 14-4 Auger has written a readable narrative that uses insightful analysis grounded in primary research from a regional perspective. The book is highly recommended for general and specialist readers. -- Chris Madsen International History Review XXVIII, 4 Prisoners on the Home Front sheds some much needed light on an under-represented topic in Second World War historiography. ... This book has forged a new path for the study of Canadian internment camps during the Second World War. -- A.C. Canadian Military History, Spring 2008


Auger has written a readable narrative that uses insightful analysis grounded in primary research from a regional perspective. The book is highly recommended for general and specialist readers. -- Chris Madsen International History Review XXVIII, 4 Prisoners on the Home Front sheds some much needed light on an under-represented topic in Second World War historiography. ... This book has forged a new path for the study of Canadian internment camps during the Second World War. -- A.C. Canadian Military History, Spring 2008 The memoir material provides an ideal counterpoint to the basic history gleaned from the government sources, and the author weaves an excellent narrative from the various strands involved. ...In his recommendation of this book, my colleague Kent Fedorowich describes it as 'the benchmark for the future study of Canada's ... history as a captor power during the Second World War'. I would go further and say that in several respects it sets benchmarks for all future regional and local studies of prisoners of war and internees, be they in Canada or elsewhere. -- Bob Moore, University of Sheffield War in History, Issue 14-4 The issue of the labour and re-education camps set up during World War II has been widely addressed over the last sixty years, but few works offer a strictly Canadian point of view, and even fewer focus on Quebec. Thus, Martin F. Auger's work is most welcome. He describes the living conditions to which prisoners, mostly Germans and Italians, were subjected for several years, and explains the various reasons that drove Canadian authorities to set up such labour camps. ... In short, Auger's work is indispensable for anyone interested in Canada's national war effort during the Second World War. -- Charles Letourneau Canadian Army Journal, Vol.10.1


Author Information

Martin F. Auger is completing his doctorate in history at the University of Ottawa. His thesis examines aircraft design and development in Canada during the Second World War.

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