<em>Mothers’ Darlings of the South Pacific</em> targets a scholarly audience, but the writing style and contents are comprehensible and accessible to a general readership. It represents a significant (and overdue) intervention into the history of the Pacific War and interracial intimacy, and it also generates new questions for families of those men who served." - Noah Riseman, <em>The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 51, No. 4</em> (2016)<br /><br />"While not shying away from the sentimentality that pervades their subject, these studies also manage to present a critical perspective on the social institutions that governed race, marriage and immigration in mid twentieth-century America and the Pacific. The result is a highly original set of studies that deserve the attention not only of scholars of the Pacific and the United States but anyone with an interest in problems of familial loss, longing, and intergenerational memory." - Geoffrey White, <em>Journal of New Zealand Studies, No. 23</em> (2016)<br /><br />"<em>Mother’s Darlings of the South Pacific</em> is a valuable addition to Pacific and American history on many levels, in the scope of its coverage, the poignancy of its findings, and the subtle differences between island groups in the way the offspring were treated. It is also a fine example of how historians can blend oral testimony with documentary sources. The book is a welcome addition to Pacific and American history. It is an exemplar of the difficulties involved in broaching tender family topics." - Clive Moore, <em>Australian Journal of Politics and History, Vol. 63, Issue 1</em>, 2017<br /><br />"This book is a long overdue and much needed account of stories that have been neglected in the ongoing narrative of World War II." - Aaron Smale, <em>Mana Magazine </em>(New Zealand)<br /><br />"<em>Mothers’ Darlings</em> is also an original, extraordinary and much-welcome addition to the historiographies of children and Indigenous childhood; race, gender and especially interracial relationships and marriage; the Indigenous 1940s (including social and labour history); and, of course, the Second World War." - Mary Jane McCallum, <em>AlterNative, Vol. 13, No. 1</em>, 2017<br /><br />"This important text with its insightful images and maps contextualizes with empathy some of the lived experiences that have not been documented in this way. With its attached resource guide to assist people searching for families, Bennett and Wanhalla’s book goes beyond the limits of academia and reaches the hearts of those asking similar questions." - Safua Akeli, <em>Journal of Samoan Studies, Vol.7, No. 1</em>, 2017<br /><br />"<em>Mothers’ Darlings of the South Pacific </em>is a unique and special account of relationships that have their origins in war. These affiliations involved power and possibility, encounter and exchange, as well as exploitation. Their legacy has persisted long after the soldiers departed. Bennett and Wanhalla’s collection shows just how strongly they continue to resonate generations later." - Yorick Smaal, <em>Australian Historical Studies, 48:3</em>, 2017<br /><br />"Pacific scholars interested in kinship, the family, and children will appreciate this research. . . . Those interested in existential Pacific personhood will also trace a mix of individualist and relational elements in these life histories . . . [reminding] us that Pacific War relics include both people’s bodies and stories." - Lamont Lindstrom, <em>The Contemporary Pacific, 30:1</em> (2018)
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Judith A. Bennett is professor of Pacific history at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand.Angela Wanhalla is professor in the History Programme at the University of Otago.
Jacqueline Leckie is adjunct Research Fellow at Stout Centre for New Zealand Studies, Victoria University of Wellington and Conjoint Associate Professor at School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Newcastle.