Friends and enemies : the allies and neutral Ireland in the Second World War

Author(s)

    • Garner, Karen

Bibliographic Information

Friends and enemies : the allies and neutral Ireland in the Second World War

Karen Garner

Manchester University Press, 2021

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [237]-245) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This history of Anglo-American efforts to overturn Ireland's neutrality policy during the Second World War adds complexity to the grand narrative of the Western Alliance against the Axis Powers, exploring relatively unexamined emotional, personalised, and gendered politics that underlay policymaking and alliance relations. Friends and enemies combines the methodologies of diplomatic history through its close reliance on archival documentation with attention to new theoretical understandings regarding the roles played by personal friendships and enmities and competing masculine ideologies among national leaders. Including, Winston Churchill, Franklin Roosevelt and Eamon de Valera, and their close foreign policy advisers in London, Washington DC and Dublin, as they constructed national identities and defined their nations' special relationships in time of war. -- .

Table of Contents

Introduction 1 Agreements Made, Pledges Broken: Europe in the 1930s 2 Neutral States in a World at War, September 1939 through May 1940 3 'Unstoppable' Germany, 'Unbeatable' Britain, June through December 1940 4 In Pursuit of America's Friendship, January through June 1941 5 British Friend, Irish Foe, July through December 1941 6 Efforts to 'Break the Backbone' of Irish Neutrality, January 1942 through December 1943 7 Eire, Neutral to the Bitter End, January 1944 through June 1945 Conclusion Bibliography Index -- .

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