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Youth at War

Feldpost "Letters of a German Boy to His Parents, 1943-1945</I>

by Ruth Cape (Volume editor)
©2011 Monographs XII, 234 Pages

Summary

Youth at War: Feldpost Letters of a German Boy to His Parents, 1943-1945 is a bilingual (German and English), annotated edition of a large collection of Feldpost letters and postcards written by a German boy between September 1943 and February 1945. Born in 1927, Gerhard G. was one of Germany’s youngest soldiers during the Second World War. He was only fifteen years old when in September 1943 he became a student (Luftwaffenhelfer) in the German Flak, an anti-aircraft gun unit that defended Germany against frequent aerial attacks by the Allied Forces. In July 1944, he was drafted into the R.A.D., a compulsory national labor service for young men and women. Finally, in October 1944, Gerhard joined the German navy (Kriegsmarine), where he served on the pocket battleship Admiral Scheer from January to March 1945. In May 1945, at the age of seventeen, he became an American prisoner of war. Due to his young age, he was released and permitted to return home in August 1945. This collection of one hundred and forty letters and postcards he had mailed to his parents was found in his house, shortly before his death in May 2008, neatly tied together by a string and in chronological order. It represents the large majority, if not all of the correspondence to his family that reached them while he was away from home. Gerhard’s letters give deep insight into many aspects of military and social life during the Second World War, while offering the reader a rare and close look at the war experiences, thoughts, and feelings of an intelligent German boy who, from one day to the next, was made a part of Hitler’s war machine. In combination with photographs and other documents from his childhood, youth, and young adulthood, these letters help reconstruct an interesting piece of German Alltagsgeschichte and can perhaps shed new light on a much-discussed time in German history. The edition, which includes a historical and biographical introduction, is not only a valuable source for scholars and students in various disciplines, but also addresses general readers with an interest in the social history of the Second World War.

Details

Pages
XII, 234
Year
2011
ISBN (PDF)
9781453905104
ISBN (Hardcover)
9781433111099
DOI
10.3726/978-1-4539-0510-4
Language
English
Publication date
2010 (October)
Keywords
German Society Deutschland Geschichte 1943-1945 Erlebnisbericht German Social, Military, and Cultural History, S German Social Military and Cultural History Second World War German Culture Psychology Religion Literature
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2010. XII, 234 pp., num. ill.

Biographical notes

Ruth Cape (Volume editor)

Ruth I. Cape is Assistant Professor of German at Austin College in Texas. She completed graduate work in history and Latin at the University of Münster in Germany and at the University of Arizona in Tucson. She received her MA and Ph.D. in Germanic languages from UCLA and is the author of the monograph Das französische Ungewitter. Goethes Bildersprache zur Französischen Revolution (1991), and the editor of a bilingual and annotated edition of Johannes Pfefferkorn’s Der Juden Spiegel [The Jews’ Mirror] of 1507 (2011).

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Title: Youth at War