The American challenge in uniform: the arrival of America’s armies in World War II and European women

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29 mars 2012

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info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1991-9336

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OpenEdition

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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ , info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess




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David Ellwood, « The American challenge in uniform: the arrival of America’s armies in World War II and European women », European journal of American studies, ID : 10.4000/ejas.9577


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A vast body of material exists – memoirs, diaries, films, plays, novels, official records – on the impact and reception of America’s armed forces armies in Europe after 1942. Britain, Italy, France, Austria and of course Germany all offer relevant evidence. The popular British phrase about the GI’s being ‘over-paid, over-sexed and over here’ brilliantly sums up many of the tensions the encounter threw up: over money and life-styles, courtship rituals and the treatment of local women, over sovereignty and the American impulse to requisition every local resource they could get their hands on. Local men thought ‘their’ women were being requisitioned.  The Americans had not come to do ‘nation-building’, and yet their presence left memories, changed attitudes and altered prospects on the future, especially among women. Afterwards American experts claimed that their armed forces had set off a ‘revolution of rising expectations’. Although a contradictory, complex encounter, there is enough evidence to suggest they might have been right.

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