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What Did You Do During the War?

Book

What Did You Do During the War?

DOI link for What Did You Do During the War?

What Did You Do During the War? book

The Last Throes of the British Pro-Nazi Right, 1940-45

What Did You Do During the War?

DOI link for What Did You Do During the War?

What Did You Do During the War? book

The Last Throes of the British Pro-Nazi Right, 1940-45
ByRichard Griffiths
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 12 October 2016
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315712673
Pages 380
eBook ISBN 9781315712673
Subjects Humanities, Politics & International Relations
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Griffiths, R. (2016). What Did You Do During the War?: The Last Throes of the British Pro-Nazi Right, 1940-45 (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315712673

ABSTRACT

This book is a sequel to Richard Griffiths’s two highly successful previous books on the British pro-Nazi Right, Fellow Travellers of the Right: British Enthusiasts for Nazi Germany 1933-39 and Patriotism Perverted: Captain Ramsay, the Right Club and British Anti-Semitism 1939-1940. It follows the fortunes of his protagonists after the arrests of May-June 1940, and charts their very varied reactions to the failure of their cause, while also looking at the possible reasons for the Government’s failure to detain prominent pro-Nazis from the higher strata of society.

Some of the pro-Nazis continued with their original views, and even undertook politically subversive activity, here and in Germany. Others, finding that their pre-war balance between patriotism and pro-Nazism had now tipped firmly on the side of patriotism, fully supported the war effort, while still maintaining their old views privately. Other people found that events had made them change their views sincerely. And then there were those who, frightened by the prospect of detention or disgrace, tried to hide or even to deny their former views by a variety of subterfuges, including attacking former colleagues. This wide variety of reactions sheds new light on the equally wide range of reasons for their original admiration for Nazism, and also gives us some more general insight into what could be termed ‘the psychology of failure’.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I: Puncturing myths about the ‘phoney war’ period

chapter 1|20 pages

To fight or not to fight: The myth of Mosley’s patriotism

chapter 2|24 pages

The reception of Bryant’s Unfinished Victory: The myth of public unanimity against Nazi Germany in early 1940

part |2 pages

Part II: Peace and war, high- mindedness and low connections: the Duke of Bedford and the peace movement

chapter 3|15 pages

Evangelical anticapitalism: The strange case of the Duke of Bedford

chapter 4|19 pages

‘How can the Germans honestly be blamed?’: The infiltration of the peace movement

part |2 pages

Part III: Defence Regulation 18b and its after- effects

chapter 5|16 pages

The watershed: the arrests of May– June 1940 and their aftermath

chapter 6|28 pages

The re- emergence of extreme right- wing movements in Britain, 1940– 5

part |2 pages

Part IV: Renegades

chapter 7|28 pages

‘Long before 1939 I had become an admirer of the Nazi system’: Five British broadcasters for

part |2 pages

Part V: Pro- Nazism, patriotism, hatred, fear, remorse: the extraordinary variety of motives among former ‘fellow travellers’

chapter 8|22 pages

‘Have you found many Lavals among your Galloway friends?’: Wartime and post- war disputes between three former ‘fellow travellers of the Right’

chapter 9|12 pages

‘I wrote a very full and strong letter to the King’: two would- be negotiators

chapter 10|16 pages

‘The internment of a person of her social standing might give the public a wrong impression’: the charmed lives of various ‘pillars of society’

chapter 11|11 pages

‘His impetuous nature, obstinacy and flawed judgement’: A bull in a china shop

chapter 12|47 pages

‘You know the Jewish racket as well as I do’: the vagaries of the ‘back- to- the- land’ school

part |2 pages

Part VI: Aftermath

chapter 13|24 pages

‘Change and decay in all around I see’: further post- war decline

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