Time on the Mountain: The Office of Strategic Services in Axis-Occupied Greece, 1943-1944
Ελληνική Ιστορία 1940-49 .Ένα έθνος σε κρίση :: ΠΕΡΙΟΔΟΙ - ΘΕΜΑΤΙΚΕΣ ΕΝΟΤΗΤΕΣ :: Αρχειακές/Βιβλιογραφικές πηγές
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Time on the Mountain: The Office of Strategic Services in Axis-Occupied Greece, 1943-1944
(Εκ μέρους του φίλου Δ.Τ.)
Διδακτορική διατριβή του Μαίου 2010, στο Πανεπιστήμιο του Κεντ, Τμήμα Ιστορίας.
(Για να το δείτε ανοίξτε τον παρακάτω σύνδεσμο και μετά πάλι κλικ επάνω δεξιά στο "Download full text" για να ανοίξει σε αρχείο pdf)
http://etd.ohiolink.edu/send-pdf.cgi/Nalmpantis%20Kyriakos.pdf?kent1271704826
Title
Time on the Mountain: The Office of Strategic Services in Axis-Occupied Greece, 1943-1944 Author
Nalmpantis, Kyriakos
Degree
PHD, Kent State University, College of Arts and Sciences / Department of History, 2010.
Committee / Advisors
S. Victor Papacosma PhD (Committee Chair)
Mary Ann Heiss PhD (Committee Member)
Richard Steigmann-Gall PhD (Committee Member)
Andrew Barnes PhD (Committee Member)
Mark Colvin PhD (Committee Member)
Pages
339p.
Abstract
Using the wartime reports produced by various field agents of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), this dissertation attempts to rebut the currently hegemonic notion that the communist-led EAM/ELAS resistance organization was unprepared to militarily challenge the British and their anticommunist Greek clients for control of Greece after the German evacuation in late 1944. It also seeks to counter the related assumption that EAM/ELAS’s wide popularity after the end of the Axis occupation made a fight with the British unnecessary. The fact that conflict erupted anyway is cited by many historians sympathetic to EAM/ELAS as proof positive that EAM/ELAS’s supposedly hapless, naïve, and inexperienced leadership was manipulated into starting a revolution by the preternaturally clever British. The OSS reports from various parts of wartime Greece collected in this dissertation refute this supposition.
By restoring historical agency to EAM/ELAS, this study also implicitly broaches the broader question of the origin of revolutionary violence. Despite the stated commitment of EAM/ELAS’s leaders to the concept of the Popular Front, the organization as a whole was responsible for conducting numerous ideological witch-hunts against its perceived domestic enemies during the war. In contrast, opposing the Axis appeared in many instances to be a secondary concern for many within the organization. Ultimately, this study argues that the beguiling utopian vision of a communist future for Greece created a kind of revolutionary imperative that dragged many members of EAM/ELAS, whether leaders or rank-and-file, along in its inexorable wake. Unfortunately for Greece, at the end of that path lay civil war.
http://etd.ohiolink.edu/send-pdf.cgi/Nalmpantis%20Kyriakos.pdf?kent1271704826
Διδακτορική διατριβή του Μαίου 2010, στο Πανεπιστήμιο του Κεντ, Τμήμα Ιστορίας.
(Για να το δείτε ανοίξτε τον παρακάτω σύνδεσμο και μετά πάλι κλικ επάνω δεξιά στο "Download full text" για να ανοίξει σε αρχείο pdf)
http://etd.ohiolink.edu/send-pdf.cgi/Nalmpantis%20Kyriakos.pdf?kent1271704826
Title
Time on the Mountain: The Office of Strategic Services in Axis-Occupied Greece, 1943-1944 Author
Nalmpantis, Kyriakos
Degree
PHD, Kent State University, College of Arts and Sciences / Department of History, 2010.
Committee / Advisors
S. Victor Papacosma PhD (Committee Chair)
Mary Ann Heiss PhD (Committee Member)
Richard Steigmann-Gall PhD (Committee Member)
Andrew Barnes PhD (Committee Member)
Mark Colvin PhD (Committee Member)
Pages
339p.
Abstract
Using the wartime reports produced by various field agents of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), this dissertation attempts to rebut the currently hegemonic notion that the communist-led EAM/ELAS resistance organization was unprepared to militarily challenge the British and their anticommunist Greek clients for control of Greece after the German evacuation in late 1944. It also seeks to counter the related assumption that EAM/ELAS’s wide popularity after the end of the Axis occupation made a fight with the British unnecessary. The fact that conflict erupted anyway is cited by many historians sympathetic to EAM/ELAS as proof positive that EAM/ELAS’s supposedly hapless, naïve, and inexperienced leadership was manipulated into starting a revolution by the preternaturally clever British. The OSS reports from various parts of wartime Greece collected in this dissertation refute this supposition.
By restoring historical agency to EAM/ELAS, this study also implicitly broaches the broader question of the origin of revolutionary violence. Despite the stated commitment of EAM/ELAS’s leaders to the concept of the Popular Front, the organization as a whole was responsible for conducting numerous ideological witch-hunts against its perceived domestic enemies during the war. In contrast, opposing the Axis appeared in many instances to be a secondary concern for many within the organization. Ultimately, this study argues that the beguiling utopian vision of a communist future for Greece created a kind of revolutionary imperative that dragged many members of EAM/ELAS, whether leaders or rank-and-file, along in its inexorable wake. Unfortunately for Greece, at the end of that path lay civil war.
http://etd.ohiolink.edu/send-pdf.cgi/Nalmpantis%20Kyriakos.pdf?kent1271704826
ΔΑΙΔΑΛΟΣ- Αριθμός μηνυμάτων : 2845
Ημερομηνία εγγραφής : 28/03/2010
Τόπος : daidalakos@yahoo.com
Παρόμοια θέματα
» The Office of Strategic Services and Greece: The Missing Link of the Mediterranean Campaign
» Nazi Invasion of Crete pt1-2 circa 1944 Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
» Six months in the life of a South African Officer in Occupied Greece-Jack Gage
» Moscow’s Cold War on the Periphery: Soviet Policy in Greece, Iran, and Turkey, 1943–1948
» What the Germans did to Greece - LIFE MAGAZINE 27-11- 1944
» Nazi Invasion of Crete pt1-2 circa 1944 Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
» Six months in the life of a South African Officer in Occupied Greece-Jack Gage
» Moscow’s Cold War on the Periphery: Soviet Policy in Greece, Iran, and Turkey, 1943–1948
» What the Germans did to Greece - LIFE MAGAZINE 27-11- 1944
Ελληνική Ιστορία 1940-49 .Ένα έθνος σε κρίση :: ΠΕΡΙΟΔΟΙ - ΘΕΜΑΤΙΚΕΣ ΕΝΟΤΗΤΕΣ :: Αρχειακές/Βιβλιογραφικές πηγές
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