In the recent campaign led by the National Congress of Italian
Canadians to gain redress for compatriots interned during the
Second World War, leaders claimed that the Canadian state had waged
a 'war against ethnicity.' Their version of history, argue the
editors, drew on selective evidence and glossed over the fascist
past of some Italian Canadians.
The editors have assembled scholars who, while having diverse
views, seek to stimulate informed debate. Enemies Within is the
first study of its kind to examine not only the formulation and
uneven implementation of internment policy, but the social and
gender history of internment. It brings together national and
international perspectives. The book offers differing
interpretations of Italian internment in Canada, the United
Kingdom, the United States, and Australia. It invites comparisons
between Italian Canadians and Canada's other internees, including
Communists, German Canadians, Ukrainian Canadians and Jewish
refugees. Contemporary redress campaigns are examined. Masculinity,
female internees, Communist women's release politics, and memory
culture are some of the little-studied subjects that also receive
attention.
This book contains photographs never before seen. A general
introduction and four section introductions provide valuable
background to the issues being discussed.
General
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