Read more
Klappentext Provides an exploration of the experiences of soldiers who fought in the Middle East during World War II. 'Johnston makes a novel, interesting and impeccably well-written contribution to the corpus of literature on the Australian soldier's Second World War. He does an excellent job of answering his principal question: rebutting the 'Anzac myth' through detailed examination of contemporaneous attitudes Cambridge University Press should be commended for producing an attractive volume including a good number of photographs and some decent maps. It would be too much to ask for Orders of Battle to provide an overview as to formations' and individual units' course through the Middle East, but they can easily be accessed online.' Alexander Wilson, The Second World War Military Operations Research Group Zusammenfassung Anzacs in the Middle East is a compelling exploration of the experiences of soldiers who fought in the Middle East during World War II. The book examines the relationships between Australians and their allies and also how they related to the local people: Greeks! Egyptians! Syrians! Lebanese and Palestinians. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; 1. Travelling to the Great Adventure; 2. A Different World - The Middle East; 3. 'They're troublesome you know': The First Libyan Campaign; 4. 'Fighting shoulder to shoulder': Greece; 5. 'Australia, Australia, you are good': Crete; 6. 'Unity of feeling and purpose': The Siege of Tobruk; 7. 'They treat us as a dependent nation': Syria and Lebanon; 8. 'Gyppo Land': Alexandria to Alamein; Conclusion.