The Amaroc News: The Daily Newspaper of the American Forces in Germany, 1919-1923

Author:   Alfred E. Cornebise ,  Howard Rusk Long
Publisher:   Southern Illinois University Press
ISBN:  

9780809310012


Pages:   280
Publication Date:   01 September 1981
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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The Amaroc News: The Daily Newspaper of the American Forces in Germany, 1919-1923


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Overview

"""Hell, heaven, or Hoboken by Christmas"" vowed Black Jack Pershing when the Novem­ber armistice silenced the Great War, but in fact American forces occupied the Rhineland from 1918 to 1923: it was to inform and enter­tain those troops on foreign soil that the Amaroc News was created in 1919. The audience of the Amaroc (American Army of Occupation) News was the Ameri­can doughboy, the soldier without a war, or, as Howard Rusk Long says in his Foreword, the ""unhappy aggregate of exiles formed into an army of occupation and forced by disci­pline into the deadend routine of peacetime soldiering away from home."" Thus Corne­bise's social history focuses on the soldier and the life he lived as reflected in the pages of a paper staffed primarily by military men, by men who knew the interests of the soldier in an occupation army. Cornebise sketches a chronological his­tory of the Amaroc News, then moves quickly to the problems faced by the liveliest military newspaper after World War I. Using as his major source the Amaroc itself, records of the Army Expeditionary Forces (WWI), and other material from the National Archives, Cornebise draws parallels between the lives of the occupation soldiers of 1918-23 and those soldiers overseas today, especially in Germany. The peacetime doughboy had little desire to be part of an occupying force in Germany. Nobody did. Not the French, not the Belgians, not the British. The Germans decidedly did not want them there. Yet American soldiers at least had the Amaroc News, a highly color­ful newspaper that gave them a blend of the concerns of most young American men--women, sports, jobs, travel, education. But it gave them more: soldiers who read Amaroc came away with an expanded sense of the world's events and of America's changing position in the international picture."

Full Product Details

Author:   Alfred E. Cornebise ,  Howard Rusk Long
Publisher:   Southern Illinois University Press
Imprint:   Southern Illinois University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
ISBN:  

9780809310012


ISBN 10:   0809310015
Pages:   280
Publication Date:   01 September 1981
Audience:   College/higher education ,  General/trade ,  Undergraduate ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Alfred E. Cornebise is Professor of History at the University of Northern Colorado.

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