This episode of HistoryChatter takes the audience to India and South East Asia during the Second World War.
It explores the production of a series of films through which British soldiers were found sending warm private messages to their families at home, called Old Blighty films, they were commissioned by the British government agencies, as a means to boost the sagging morale of the isolated British soldiers at the Burma front.
Yet, these films rarely consider the fact that a majority of soldiers of the Fourteenth Army were Indians.
Indeed, Indians or soldiers from elsewhere were sometimes used as lifeless props. Historian Steve Hawley, while researching these films, arranged for a reckoning with such memories and silences.
HistoryChatter concludes that this is how History is to be read and engaged with. It will always deliver significant but incomplete messages, and the reader and the listener must pay keen attention to what it leaves out.
Hosted by Dr. Anirban Bandyopadhyay
You can follow us and leave us feedback on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter @eplogmedia,
For partnerships/queries send you can send us an email at bonjour@eplog.media.
If you like this show, please subscribe and leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts, so other people can find us. You can also find us on https://www.eplog.media
The views expressed on all the shows produced and distributed by Ep.Log Media are personal to the host and the guest of the shows respectively and with no intention to harm the sentiments of any individual/organisation.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free