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Bernice Archer's comparative study of the experiences of the
Western civilians interned by the Japanese in mixed family camps
and sexually segregated camps in the Far East, combines a wide
variety of conventional and unconventional source material. This
includes contemporary War, Foreign and Colonial Office papers,
diaries, letters, camp newspapers and artefacts, post-war medical,
engineering and educational reports, biographies, autobiographies,
memoirs and over fifty oral interviews with ex-internees. Using
contemporary personal accounts, the shock of the Japanese victories
and the devastating experience of capture are highlighted. This
book also covers wider issues such as the role of women in war,
gender and war, children and war, colonial culture, oral history,
and war and memory.
Anyone with an interest in the Second World War in the Far East is
familiar with military and Prisoner-of-War narratives. But how the
130,000 British, Dutch and American civilian men, women and
children captured and interned by the Japanese in the Far East
during the same period survived their internment is less
well-known. How did these colonial people react to the sudden
humiliation of surrender? How did they adapt to three-and-a-half
years in Japanese camps in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, the
Philippines and the Dutch East Indies? "The" "Internment of Western
Civilians under the Japanese 1941-1945 "addresses these questions.
Bernice Archer's comparative study of the experiences of the
Western civilians interned by the Japanese in mixed family camps
and sexually segregated camps in the Far East combines a wide
variety of conventional and unconventional course material. This
includes: contemporary War, Foreign and Colonial Office papers,
diaries, letters, camp newspapers and artifacts and post-war
medical, engineering and educational reports, biographies,
autobiographies, memoirs and over 50 oral interviews with
ex-internees.
An investigation of evacuation policies reveals the moral,
economic, political, emotional and racial dilemmas faced by the
imperial powers and the colonial communities in the Far East. Using
contemporary personally accounts, the shock of the Japanese
victories and the devastating experience of capture are
highlighted. Inside the camps, the author focuses on agency and
survival demonstrating that far from being passive victims with no
control over their lives, the interned Western civilian internees
who used and adapted the social and cultural resourcesthey
inherited from the colonial world-such as the embroideries sewn by
the women in the camps, and in particular, the three quilts made by
the women in Changi-to survive their ordeal.
"The Internment of Western Civilians under the Japanese 1941-1945"
""alsocovers wider issues such as the role of women in war, gender
and war, children and war, colonial culture, oral history and war
and memory.
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