First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939

As demobilization gathered pace in 1919, the colonial authorities in both the British and French Caribbean fretted about the reintegration of thousands of men imagined to have been rendered volatile and dangerous by their time overseas. By 1939, however, the situation appeared quite different. Veter...

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主要作者: Joseph, M
格式: Journal article
語言:English
出版: Taylor and Francis 2019
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author Joseph, M
author_facet Joseph, M
author_sort Joseph, M
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description As demobilization gathered pace in 1919, the colonial authorities in both the British and French Caribbean fretted about the reintegration of thousands of men imagined to have been rendered volatile and dangerous by their time overseas. By 1939, however, the situation appeared quite different. Veterans in the British islands were restive and dissatisfied, while their French Caribbean counterparts were comparatively settled. This contrast was not simply about disparities in state generosity. Rather, the article explores how differing conceptions of the relationship between military service and citizenship shaped the actions of the colonial and imperial governments. Where the governments of Martinique and Guadeloupe helped to foster the growth of veterans’ associations which were then incorporated into local policy-making and, more broadly, an imperial network of state aid, the British colonial authorities sought to suppress veteran identity in pursuit of the ultimately unachievable ideal of a final settlement with the demobilized men. An analysis of the interwar veterans’ movements therefore opens up questions of colonial governance, citizenship, and identity.
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spelling oxford-uuid:88142f80-e9bd-4ce9-b490-1c9166c36bd82022-03-26T22:14:40ZFirst World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:88142f80-e9bd-4ce9-b490-1c9166c36bd8EnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2019Joseph, MAs demobilization gathered pace in 1919, the colonial authorities in both the British and French Caribbean fretted about the reintegration of thousands of men imagined to have been rendered volatile and dangerous by their time overseas. By 1939, however, the situation appeared quite different. Veterans in the British islands were restive and dissatisfied, while their French Caribbean counterparts were comparatively settled. This contrast was not simply about disparities in state generosity. Rather, the article explores how differing conceptions of the relationship between military service and citizenship shaped the actions of the colonial and imperial governments. Where the governments of Martinique and Guadeloupe helped to foster the growth of veterans’ associations which were then incorporated into local policy-making and, more broadly, an imperial network of state aid, the British colonial authorities sought to suppress veteran identity in pursuit of the ultimately unachievable ideal of a final settlement with the demobilized men. An analysis of the interwar veterans’ movements therefore opens up questions of colonial governance, citizenship, and identity.
spellingShingle Joseph, M
First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title_full First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title_fullStr First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title_full_unstemmed First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title_short First World War veterans and the state in the French and British Caribbean, 1919-1939
title_sort first world war veterans and the state in the french and british caribbean 1919 1939
work_keys_str_mv AT josephm firstworldwarveteransandthestateinthefrenchandbritishcaribbean19191939