Review:
Internal ** 2972 characters This book examines the experiences of Jamaicans and to a lesser extent other West Indians who served in British West Indies Regiments and West India Regiments in WWI; it also takes a critical look at how racial discrimination affected Black volunteers. It was only after British troops began to lose tens of thousands of troops that there were urgent appeals for volunteers in the West Indies. In Jamaica announcements were read out in churches in October 1915. The appeal focused on the inclusiveness of Empire, and called for "all to join hands, and hearts together to strike the necessary death blow to Germanism, bearing in mind "United we stand, divided we fall?." The call to arms did not fall on the ears of white Jamaicans only, but Black men seriously considered the threat of a German-held Jamaica and the consequences. Further, they saw volunteering as a means of gaining equality, and opportunity for social or political advancement. In September 1914, Marcus Garvey?s United Negro Improvement Association (UNIA) passed a resolution of loyalty to the King and Empire, and in a letter accompanying the resolution he said, "Our love for, and devotion to, His Majesty and the Empire, stands unrivalled and from the depths of our hearts we pray for the crowning victory of the British soldiers now at War." (page 44) Garvey?s support for the war effort might have reflected the degree to which he had internalised some values of Empire and which he saw it as benchmarks for self-improvement. Also, he might have been influenced by the decision of some Irish Nationalists, widely reported in the Jamaican press, to suspend Home Rule agitation for the duration of the war in exchange for post-war concessions. But many white military men believed Black soldiers lacked the masculine qualities of stoicism, self-discipline and rationality to be an effective force on the modern battlefield. They ignored the significant role that the latter played in previous imperial campaigns in the 19th century. Such attitudes boosted the former?s self-image and imperial arrogance. The first chapter in the book discusses the wartime crisis of white masculinity. Raymond Asquith, son of the wartime Liberal Prime Minister, complained of the increasing irritability and war-weariness of the officers in his own regiment, and thought that it showed a declining image of British masculinity. When given the opportunity, Black soldiers showed their masculinity on the battlefield, especially in Africa. But, at the beginning of the war, there had been a reluctance to accept them as volunteers. Although they were excluded mainly from front-line service in Europe, Black Jamaican volunteers appropriated codes of military heroism and sacrifice. Smith?s study also provides a comprehensive discussion of the war's impact on anti-colonial struggles in the West Indies. Veterans used their knowledge and experience of war to support demands for land and political enfranchisement. -- .
About the Author:
Richard Smith teaches in the Department of Media and Communications, Goldsmiths College, University of London
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