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Prisoners In Paradise : American Women In The Wartime South Pacific

  • Prisoners In Paradise : American Women In The Wartime  South Pacific
  • Attribution

    Theresa Kaminski
  • Publication Details

    Book, University Press of Kansas, 2000
  • Availability

    LOCATIONCALL #STATUS
      (LOWER LEVEL)  D805.P6 K36 2000         AVAILABLE

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  • Description

    While Rosie the Riveter and millions of American women fought World War II on the home front, other women witnessed the war firsthand. Although most of us are familiar with accounts of POWs, few realize that the Japanese imprisoned thousands of American civilian women in the Philippines during World War II. While most civilian women were interned, others fled into the hills or adopted new identities to avoid captivity, relying on neighbors and former servants for survival. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)
  • Author

  • Subject

  • Places in this work

  • Notes

    • "Although most of us are familiar with accounts of POWs, few realize that the Japanese imprisoned thousands of American civilian women in the Philippines during World War II. They were businessmen’s wives and career girls, missionaries and teachers, nurses and mothers - and some were even spies. Many had grown accustomed to the good life in a colonial society, but after the Japanese invaded they had to learn to fend for themselves. Prisoners in Paradise is the most complete look at the experiences of these heroic women." "Theresa Kaminski takes readers inside the internment camps to show how these women coped and how the experience changed them." "While most civilian women were interned, others fled into the hills or adopted new identities to avoid captivity, relying on neighbors and former servants for survival. Kaminski shares their stories as well."–BOOK JACKET
  • Contents

    • 1. Women’s Duty and the Decision to Stay in the Pacific
    • 2. The Struggle to Organize
    • 3. Work and Womanhood in Internment
    • 4. Romance, Marriage, and Family Life During the War
    • 5. Evading Internment
    • 6. National Identity and Subversion of the Enemy
    • 7. Rescue and Its Aftermath
  • ISBN

    • 0700610030
  • LCCN

  • Open Library ID

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