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Zbysek Necas was just 18, and still a high school student, when he
escaped from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia a month before
the outbreak of war in 1939. He managed to make his way to Britain
where he had a cousin. Necas enlisted in the RAF in 1940, initially
being posted as an interpreter at the Czech Depot. Some of his
early duties involved the interrogation of captured German aircrew.
He was, however, determined to fly. That wish came not as a pilot,
but as a radar operator. In time, Necas was posted to 68 Squadron,
which throughout the war had a large number of Czech exiles on its
strength - one flight was entirely Czech-manned. In this moving
memoir, he details just what it was like to serve as part of an RAF
night fighter crew during the second half of the Second World War.
From the organisation of squadron and operations, to the directing
of night fighters in the bomber stream, problems of maintaining
contact with the target, the duration of patrols to interception
tactics, all, and more, is revealed in this book. Having trained on
the Blenheim Mk.IV, Necas' operational patrols began on Bristol
Beaufighters, the squadron subsequently converting to de Havilland
Mosquitoes. There are of course, the graphic accounts of victory in
the air. This includes combat with a Heinkel He 177 Grief over
North Sea, or the explosion of a Dornier Do 217 after another
successful interception. As well as nighttime intruder operations
over Europe, from the summer of 1944, 68 Squadron, Necas included,
found itself drawn into the battle against Hitler's V-weapons,
particularly the V1. Necas' crew ended the war with three confirmed
kills, one probable, and two damaged. After the war, Necas returned
to his homeland where he received the tragic news that that none of
his immediate family had survived the German occupation. This is
Zbysek Necas' story of his part in the defence of Britain's skies
and the final victory against the Third Reich.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
What are the limits of cultural critique? What are the horizons?
What are the political implications? John Pemberton explores these
questions in this far-reaching ethnographic and historical
interpretation of cultural discourse in Indonesia since 1965.
Pemberton considers in particular how the appearance of order under
Soeharto's repressive New Order regime is an effect of an enigmatic
politics founded upon routine appeals to cultural values. Through a
richly textured ethnographic account of events ranging from
national elections to weddings, Pemberton simultaneously elucidates
and disturbs the contours of the New Order cultural imaginary. He
pursues the fugitive signs of circumstances that might resist the
powers of New Order rule through unexpected village practices,
among graveyard spirits, and within ascetic refuges. Key to this
study is a reexamination of the historical conditions under which a
discourse of culture emerges. Providing a close reading of a number
of Central Javanese manuscripts from the late eighteenth century
on, Pemberton outlines the conditions of knowledge formation in
Indonesia since the beginning of Dutch colonial control. As he
overturns common assumptions concerning colonial encounters, he
discloses the gradual emergence in these texts of a discursive
figure inscribed in contrast to the increasingly invasive presence
of the Dutch: a figuration of difference that came to be called
"Java."
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