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Bibliografická citace

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0 (hodnocen0 x )
BK
1st ed.
New York : Library of America, c1995
xiv, 912 s., [32] s. : il.

objednat
ISBN 1-883011-04-3 (váz.)
The Library of America ; [vol.] 77
Obsahuje černobílé fotografie na příloze, chronologii, mapky, bibliografické poznámky, glosář, rejstřík
Válka světová 2. - publicistika americká - r. 1938-1946 - reportáže
000090769
William L. Shirer: “It’s All Over” The Munich Conference: September 1938 ...1 // Dorothy Thompson: “Peace”—And the Crisis Begins Germany Occupies the Sudetenland: October 1,1938 ...4 // Vincent Sheean: Aufenthalt in Rosenheim. Anti-Semitism and the Germans: 1938 ...8 // Sigrid Schultz: Hitler Seizes 20,000 Jews. Kristallnacht: November 9,1938 ...13 // William L. Shirer: “At Dawn This Morning Hitler Moved Against Poland” // The War Begins: September 1 -3,1939 ...19 // Otto D. Tolischus: Last Warsaw Fort Yields to Germans // The Fall of Poland: September 28,1939 ...24 // Sonia Tomara: Nazi-Red Animosity Described Along Tense Frontier Border in Poland Poland Caught Between Hitler and Stalin: November 1939 ...9 // A. J, Liebling: Piris Postscript. Paris Before the Fall: May-June 1940 ...32 // Virginia Cowles: The Beginning of the End. Flight from Paris: June 1940 ...53 // John Fisher: I First Saw the Ruins of Dunkerque. With the Victorious German Army: June 1940 ...63 // Sonia Tomara: French Conceal Despair; Move as Automatons. French Capitulation: June 17,1940 ...70 // William L. Shirer: “Revengeful, Triumphant Hate”. French Humiliation at Compiegne: June 21, 1940 ...72 // Edward R. Murrow: Can They Take It?. The London Blitz: September 1940 ...77 // William L. Shirer: “The Hour Will Come When One of Us Will Break”. Berlin After a Tear of War: September 1940 ...104 // Ernest R. Pope: Blitzkrieg. Reporting American Correspondents in Berlin: 1940 ...139 // Ernie Pyle: “This Dreadful Masterpiece”. London on Fire: The Raid of December 29,1940 ...147 // Ernie Pyle: “Life Without Redemption”. Londoners in the Underground: January 1941 ...150 // C. L. Sulzberger: Retreat of Serbs Related by Writer. German Invasion of Yugoslavia: April 1941 ...153 // Robert St. John: Under Fire. German Invasion of Greece: April 1941 ...158 //
A. J. Liebling: “Remoteness from the War Affected Everybody”. A Witness to War Returns to America: 1940-41 ...i?3 // Otto D. Tolischus: The Way of Subjects Formulating Japanese Imperial Ideology: August 1941 ...184 // Wes Gallagher: “See You in Lisbon”. Refugees in Flight from Central Europe: August 1941 ...190 // Otto D. Tolischus: Tokyo Army Aide Bids Japan Fight If Parleys Fail. Signs of Impending War with Japan: September 1941 ...193 // Margaret Bourke-White: Death and Life on the Battlefields. On the Russian Front: September 1941 ...196 // Howard K. Smith: Valhalla in Transition Berlin After the Invasion of Russia: Autumn 1941 ...211 // Robert Hag)’: “The Worst News That I Have Encountered in the Last 20 Years”. America First Rally in Pittsburgh: December 7,1941 ...236 // New York Herald Tribune: President’s War Message. America Declares War: December S, 1941 ...241 // Max Hill: “This Is For Keeps”. Roundup of American Reporters in Tokyo: December 1941 . . 243 // Melville Jacoby: War Hits Manila Japan Attacks the Philippines: December S -28,1941 ...252 // Cecil Brown: “Prepare to Abandon Ship”. The Sinking of the Repulse and the Prince of Wales:. December 10,1941 ...260 // Larry Lesueur: “Tanks and Cannons Standing Starkly in the Snow”. Devastation on the Moscow Front: December 1941 ...266 // Cecil Brown: Malay Jungle War. British Complacency in Malaya: December 1941 ...280 // Walter Bernstein: Juke Joint. Off Duty in Phenix City, Alabama: December 1941 ...289 // Raymond Clapper: “The Unexpected Couldn’t Happen”. Pearl Harbor Postmortem: January 1942 ...298 // E. B. White: “The Newspaper Reader Finds It Ver)’ Difficult to Get at the Truth”. Sugar-Coating the War News: February 1942 ...300 // Clark Lee: “Everybody Knew When the Planes Were Coming” Corregidor: January-April 1942 ...303 //
Annalee Jacoby: Bataan Nurses. Nurses Under Fire in the Philippines: April 1942 ...308 // Jack Beiden: The Fever of Defeat Collapse of Allied Resistance in Burma: May 1942 ...312 // Jack Beiden: Flight Through the Jungle Stilwell’s Retreat Through Burma: May 1942 ...316 // Helen Lawrenson: “Damn the Torpedoes!”. The Merchant Marine and the Battle of the Atlantic: 1942 . . 329 // Foster Hailey: The Battle of Midway Carrier War in the Pacific: June 4, 1942 ...336 // Brendan Gill: X, B, and Chiefly A The Home Front: Rationing, 1942 ...3?? // Ted Nakashima: Concentration Camp: U.S. Style. The Internment of Japanese-Americans: 1942 ...352 // The New York Times-. “A Vast Slaughterhouse”. Reports of Genocide in Eastern Europe: June 1942 ...355 // E. B. White: Bond Rally. Dorothy Lamour in Bangor, Maine: September 1942 ...359 // Richard Tregaskis: Battle of the Ridge Guadalcanal: September 7-24,1942 ...365 // John Hersey: The Battle of the River Guadalcanal: October 7-9,1942 ...402 // Walter Graebncr: The Battle for Scoops. Foreign Correspondents in Moscow: October 1942 ...420 // J. Saunders Redding: A Negro Looks at This War African-Americans and the War:. An Argument for Support, 1942 ...426 // Roi Ottley: Negroes Are Saying . . .. African-Americans and the War:. Discrimination and Protest, 1942 ...434 // Edward R. Murrow: “A Horror Beyond What Imagination Can Grasp”. Report on Mass Murder: December 1942 ...453 // Margaret Bourke-White: Women in Lifeboats Torpedoed and Rescued at Sea: December 22,1942 ...456 // Ernie Pyle: The U.S. and Vichy in North Africa Algeria: December 1942. “Our Policy Is Still Appeasement” ...465 // “I Gather New Respect for Americans” ...467 // Man,’ Heaton Vorse: The Girls of Elkton, Maryland. Munitions Workers: 1943 ...471 // A. J. Liebling: The Foamy Fields Air War in Tunisia: January 1943 ...486 //
Ernie Pyle: The War in Tunisia February-May 1943. “Now It Is Killing That Animates Them” ...529 // “Moving at Night in Total Blackness” ...531 // “Only Slightly Above the Caveman Stage” ...534 // “Too Little to Work With, As Usual” ...536 // “Overrun Before They Knew What Was Happening” . $38 // “Nothing To Do” ...540 // “What a Tank Battle Looks Like” ...542 // “The Fantastic Surge of Caterpillar Metal” ...544 // “Into the Thick of Battle” ...546 // “Brave Men. Brave Men!” ...549 // “Little Boys Again, Lost in the Dark” ...551 // “The Greatest Damage Is Psychological” ...553 // “The God-Damned Infentry” ...555 // “When a Unit Stops to Rest” ...557 // “This Is Our War” ...560 // A. J- Liebling: Quest for Molile // Uncovering a Soldier’s Story: Tunisia and the U.S., Spring-Summer 1943 ...570 // George S. Schuyler: “When American Citizens Murder U.Š. Soldiers” // African-Americans and the War: // Crimes Against Black G.I.’s, 1943 ...598 // Robert Sherrod: The Japanese Mind Aftermath of the Battle on Attu: June 1943 ...601 // Ernie Pyle: The Sicilian Campaign July-August 1943 // “The Dying Man Was Left Utterly Alone” ...606 // “Damn Sick of War—and Deadly Tired” ...608 // “A Hell of a Job” ...’ ...610 // “Miracle Bridge” ...612 // John Hersey: This Is Democracy // American Military Administration in Sicily: August 1943 ¦ - 615 // Beirne Lay, Jr.: I Saw Regensburg Destroyed // B-17 Raid on Germany: August 17,1943 ...623 // John Steinbeck: Fear of Death as Green Troops Sail to Invasion // Troop Ship to Salerno: September 1943 ...636 // Life Magazine/George Strock: Three Americans Photograph of American War Dead: 1943 ...639 // William L. Shirer: The American Radio Traitors. Broadcasters for the Axis: 1943 ...644 // James Agee: So Proudly We Fail. American War Movies: 1943 ...658 //
Deton J. Brooks, Jr.: Morale Sags at Camp Forrest as Jim Crow Rules African-Americans and the War: A Southern Army Base, November 1943 ...662 // Edward Kennedy: Ritton Struck Soldier in Hospital, Was Castigated by Eisenhower // The Patton Slapping Case: August-November 1943 ...665 // Richard Tregaskis: “Then I Got It” // American Correspondent Wounded in Italy: November 1943 . 672 // Robert Sherrod: from Tarawa: The Story of a Battle The Marines at Tarawa: November 1943. “I Didn’t Know Whether We Had the Heart to Fight a War” ...683 // View of the Carnage ...687 // “The Hard Facts of War” ...708 // Edward R. Murrow: “The Target Was To Be the Big City” // Bombing Raid Over Berlin: December 2,1943 ...713 // Martha Gellhorn: The Price of Fire Royal Air Force Burn Center: December 1943 ...721 // Ernie Pyle: The Italian Campaign: “Slow Progress”. December 1943 -January 1944 // “The Land and the Weather Are Both Against Us” . . 728 // “One Demolished Town After Another” ...7JO // “Mule Ricking Outfit” ...732 // “This One Is Captain Waskow” ...735 // Homer Bigart: San Pietro a Village of the Dead; // Victory Costs Americans Dearly // Battle of San Pietro: Italy, December 1943 ...738 // Margaret Bourke-White: Over the Lines // Spotting Artillery from a Piper Cub: Italy, 1943 ...7+6 // Vincent Tubbs: Christmas on New Guinea // African-American G.I.’s in the Southwest Pacific: // December 1943 ...761 // Gertrude Stein: “Tired of Winter Tired of War” // Occupied France: Jatmary-February 1944 ...764 // Walter Bernstein: I Love Mountain Warfare Italy: January 1944 ...78x // Chronology, 1933 -I94S ...795 // Maps ...831 // Biographical Notes ...848 // Note on the Texts ...864 // Acknowledgments ...869 // Notes ...872 // Glossary of Military Terms ...897 // Index ...902

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