The Barbed-Wire College: Reeducating German POWs in the United States During World War II

The Barbed-Wire College: Reeducating German POWs in the United States During World War II

by Ron Theodore Robin
The Barbed-Wire College: Reeducating German POWs in the United States During World War II

The Barbed-Wire College: Reeducating German POWs in the United States During World War II

by Ron Theodore Robin

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Overview

From Stalag 17 to The Manchurian Candidate, the American media have long been fascinated with stories of American prisoners of war. But few Americans are aware that enemy prisoners of war were incarcerated on our own soil during World War II. In The Barbed-Wire College Ron Robin tells the extraordinary story of the 380,000 German prisoners who filled camps from Rhode Island to Wisconsin, Missouri to New Jersey. Using personal narratives, camp newspapers, and military records, Robin re-creates in arresting detail the attempts of prison officials to mold the daily lives and minds of their prisoners.

From 1943 onward, and in spite of the Geneva Convention, prisoners were subjected to an ambitious reeducation program designed to turn them into American-style democrats. Under the direction of the Pentagon, liberal arts professors entered over 500 camps nationwide. Deaf to the advice of their professional rivals, the behavioral scientists, these instructors pushed through a program of arts and humanities that stressed only the positive aspects of American society. Aided by German POW collaborators, American educators censored popular books and films in order to promote democratic humanism and downplay class and race issues, materialism, and wartime heroics. Red-baiting Pentagon officials added their contribution to the program, as well; by the war's end, the curriculum was more concerned with combating the appeals of communism than with eradicating the evils of National Socialism.

The reeducation officials neglected to account for one factor: an entrenched German military subculture in the camps, complete with a rigid chain of command and a propensity for murdering "traitors." The result of their neglect was utter failure for the reeducation program. By telling the story of the program's rocky existence, however, Ron Robin shows how this intriguing chapter of military history was tied to two crucial episodes of twentieth- century American history: the battle over the future of American education and the McCarthy-era hysterics that awaited postwar America.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400821624
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 04/03/1995
Series: William G. Bowen Series , #22
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
File size: 977 KB

About the Author

Ron Robin teaches history at the University of Haifa in Israel. Among his books is Enclaves of America: The Rhetoric of American Political Architecture Abroad, 1900-1965 (Princeton).

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface and Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction 3
Ch. 1 The Genesis of Reeducation 17
Ch. 2 The POW Camp and the Total Institution 30
Ch. 3 Professors into Propagandists 43
Ch. 4 The Idea Factory and Its Intellectual Laborers 59
Ch. 5 Der Ruf: Inner Emigration, Collective Guilt, and the POW 75
Ch. 6 Literature: The Battle of the Books 91
Ch. 7 Film: Mass Culture and Reeducation 107
Ch. 8 Politics and Scholarship: The Reeducation College 127
Ch. 9 The Democracy Seminars: Preparation for "One World" 145
Ch. 10 Variations on the Theme of Reeducation 162
Ch. 11 Reeducation and the Decline of the American Dons 180
Notes 189
Note on the Sources 209
Index 213

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"The Barbed-Wire College is a fascinating account of the Army's attempt to re-educate German POWs during World War II. Ron Robin's well-documented study brings to light this virtually unknown chapter in World War II history."—Edward M. Coffman, University of Wisconsin-Madison (Emeritus)

"By studying a crucial episode that historians have overlooked-the United States' effort to ‘re-educate' 380,000 German prisoners of war-Robin illuminates the fascinating relationship between humanistic scholarship and government policy in the years during and immediately following World War II. His analysis, based on superb archival research, is at once thoughtful and persuasive."—Richard Polenberg, Cornell University

"A well-written and thoroughly researched study. . . . Anyone with an interest in the state of American culture during the war years will have to read this book."—William L. O'Neill, Rutgers University

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