The Wartime Broadcasts of Francis Stuart, 1942-1944Lilliput Press, 2000 - 218 หน้า In 1940, shortly after the outbreak of World War II, Francis Stuart (1902-2000) moved from County Wicklow to Berlin, where he accepted a university position. Stuart remained in the Third Reich for the duration of the war and between March 1942 and Februrary 1944, he made over 100 broadcasts on German radio to Ireland. The German sojourn and broadcasts have been at the heart of the long-running controversy over Stuart, and yet remarkably little is known about him. This work prints the complete surviving transcripts of Stuart's broadcasts, as preserved in Irish and British archives. The transcripts reveal that contrary to the myth that he was not interested in politics, Stuart followed the progress of the war very closely and was particularly attuned to its political implications for Ireland. Early confidence that a German victory would lead to a united Ireland gave way, once the war turned against the Reich, to a more measured, but always intensely anti-Allied, view of the war and Ireland's relation to it. |
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Abwehr Allied Andreas Roth Anglo-American anti-Semitism Aosdána Archives army begin Belfast believe Berlin Black List British broadcasts to Ireland Churchill civilisation Colm Tóibín culture December democracy diary domination Dublin England and America English and American Europe European fact fascism feel fighting financial powers Fine Gael foreign Francis Stuart freedom G2 transcript German going Gollancz Hitler Hugh McAteer idea Irish nationalists Irish neutrality Irishmen Irland-Redaktion Iseult Italian Italy Jews leader Liam Lynch Liam Mellowes listen London look Mairead Nazi neutral never Northern Ireland novels October outlook peace perhaps political Porteous post-war Press propaganda realised reference Roosevelt Six Counties small nations social soldiers speak spirit Stalingrad Sunday Independent talk tion Tonight troops truth Try the Sky Twenty-Six Counties Ulster Valera victory W.B. Yeats wartime whole William Joyce words writing wrote Yeats