Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T05:29:31.686Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

SEX, GENDER, AND ROMANTIC INTIMACY IN SERVICEMEN'S LETTERS DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2019

ALISON TWELLS*
Affiliation:
Sheffield Hallam University
*
Department of Humanities, Sheffield Hallam University, Sheffield, s1 1wb [email protected]

Abstract

This article explores sex and romance as under-examined aspects of wartime masculinities through a focus on letters from servicemen recipients of woollen ‘comforts’ to girls and women who knitted for them during the Second World War. It examines the tension between the cultural ideal of ‘temperate heroism’ that formed the hegemonic masculinity during the Second World War and evidence of predatory male sexuality and sexual violence, both in combat and on the home front. Servicemen's letters to anonymous knitters reveal many aspects of their emotional lives, including the widespread deployment of romance as a mechanism for maintaining morale. They also reveal that some men were able to manipulate their image as ‘heroes’ and make use of the comforts fund as a vehicle for engaging in sexually explicit correspondence and transgressive and deviant behaviours. A foregrounding of romance and sexuality suggests that we need to look again at arguments relating to the contiguity between military cultures and middle- and working-class civilian codes of respectable masculinity and male heterosexual expression. The article further engages with critiques in the history of masculinity of the neglect of working-class masculinities and the tendency to focus on cultural scripts about masculinity rather than what men actually did or felt.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

I would like to thank Chris Hopkins, Alan Malpass, Helen Rogers, Matthew Stibbe, Cornelie Usborne, and Nicola Verdon for their very helpful comments on an earlier version of this article, and also the anonymous readers at the Historical Journal for their positive and clarifying suggestions.

References

1 S. E. Ridge to Doris Dockrill, 8 Feb. 1943, Imperial War Museum (IWM), private papers of Miss D. Dockrill, documents 19147, 16/32/1.

2 Dennis Maxted, IWM, Oral History 18200, recorder Conrad Wood, 1/2/1999, reel 1.

3 By April 1943, there were between 6,000 and 7,000 ‘knitting parties’ across Britain. See Viscount Bennet, discussion in the House of Lords, 3 Aug. 1943: Hansard, vol. 128, Fifth Series, c. 958, https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/lords/1943/aug/03/merchant-navy-comforts#column_958.

4 Gill, Rebecca, ‘Networks of concern, boundaries of compassion: British relief in the South African War’, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 40 (2012), pp. 827–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 828.

5 Hinton, James, Women, social leadership and the Second World War: continuities of class (Oxford, 2002), pp. 56–7CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ann Stamper, ‘Country women in wartime – Women's Institutes, 1938–1945’, www.thewi.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0005/11111/countrywomen-in-war-time-womens-institutes-1938-1945-.pdf (unpublished paper, 2003), p. 13; Samantha Clements, ‘Feminism, citizenship and social activity: the role and importance of local women's organisations, Nottingham 1918–1969’ (D.Phil. thesis, Nottingham, 2008), pp. 174–5, 200, 204–6; Beaumont, Catriona, Housewives and citizens: domesticity and the women's movement in England (Manchester, 2013), pp. 142–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 Hinton, Women, social leadership and the Second World War, p. 78; Thorpe, Andrew, Parties at war: political organization in Second World War Britain (Oxford, 2009), pp. 155–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 166–7, 195, 206, 225, 227–8, 283.

7 Strawn, Susan, ‘American women and wartime handknitting, 1750–1950’, in Gogging, Maureen Daly and Tobin, Beth Fowkes, eds., Women and the material culture of needlework and textiles, 1750–1950 (Aldershot, 2009), pp. 245–59Google Scholar, at p. 248. Strawn argues that in terms of the cultural history of women, knitting has received less attention than other textile crafts such as quilting, embroidery, and weaving, p. 245.

8 For patriotic femininity as reassurance, see Goodman, Philomena, Women, sexuality and war (Basingstoke, 2002), pp. 1525CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 Anthropologists have pointed to the gendered social meanings of cloth and yarn. See Weiner, Annette B. and Schneider, Jane, Cloth and human experience (Washington, DC, and London, 1988)Google Scholar.

10 The evidence is disparate. See for example, images of male knitters on blogs such as http://elinorflorence.com/blog/wartime-knitting and www.atlasobscura.com/articles/when-knitting-was-a-patriotic-duty-wwi-homefront-wool-brigades.

11 CSV Action Desk/BBC Radio Lincolnshire, ‘If you can knit – you can do your bit’, WW2 Peoples' War – an archive of World War Two memories – written by the public, gathered by the BBC (Oct. 2005), https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/26/a6041026.shtml.

12 Hinton, Women, social leadership and the Second World War, p. 62. For knitting and the development of community, see Abrams, Lynn, ‘Knitting, autonomy and identity: the role of hand-knitting in the construction of women's sense of self in an island community, Shetland, c. 1850–2000, Textile History, 37 (2006), pp. 149–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13 See Mauss, Marcel, The gift: forms and functions of exchange in archaic societies (London, 1966; orig. edn 1950)Google Scholar. See Gill, ‘Networks of concern’, pp. 828, 832.

14 Meyer, Jessica, Men of war: masculinity and the First World War in Britain (Basingstoke, 2009), pp. 2, 44–5CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Martha Hanna, ‘War letters: communication between front and home front’, 1914–1918-online.net (2014), 1–22, https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/pdf/1914-1918-Online-war_letters_communication_between_front_and_home_front-2014-10-08.pdf. See also Hartley, Jenny, ‘Letters are everything: mothers and letters in the Second World War’, in Earle, Rebecca, ed., Epistolary selves: letters and letter-writers, 1600–1945 (Aldershot, 1999)Google Scholar; Christa Hämmerle, ‘‘‘You let a weeping woman call you home?’’ Private correspondences during the First World War in Austria and Germany’, in Earle, ed., Epistolary selves; Usborne, Cornelie, ‘Love letters from front and home: a private space for intimacy in the Second World War?’, in Harvey, Elizabeth, Hürter, Johannes, Umbach, Maiken, and Wirsching, Andreas, eds., Private life and privacy in Nazi Germany (Cambridge, 2019, forthcoming)Google Scholar.

15 Roper, Michael, The secret battle: emotional survival in the Great War (Manchester and New York, NY, 2009)Google Scholar.

16 Ibid., p. 25.

17 Jolly, Margaretta, In love and struggle: letters in contemporary feminism (New York, NY, 2008), pp. 68, 25CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

18 Langhamer, Claire, The English in love: the intimate story of an emotional revolution (Oxford, 2013), p. 9Google Scholar and passim.

19 Ibid., pp. 117, 166–7.

20 Ibid., p. 70.

21 Francis, Martin, The flyer: British culture and the Royal Air Force, 1939–1945 (Oxford, 2008)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

22 For love letters, see Lyons, Martin, ‘Love letters and writing practices: on écritures intimes in the nineteenth century’, Journal of Family History, 24 (1999), pp. 232–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Wyss, Eva L., ‘From the bridal letter: changes in text type from the nineteenth century to the internet era’, Journal of Historical Pragmatics, 9 (2008), pp. 225–54Google Scholar.

23 Altman, Janet, Epistolarity: approaches to a form (Columbus, OH, 1982), pp. 87116Google Scholar.

24 Christa Hämmerle, ‘“Waiting longingly…” love letters in WW1 -- a plea for a broader genre concept’, www.history-of-emotions.mpg.de/en/texte/waiting-longingly-love-letters-in-world-war-i-a-plea-for-a-broader-genre-concept, pp. 2–3.

25 Lyons, Martin, ‘New directions in the history of written culture’, Culture and History, 1 (2012)Google Scholar, http://cultureandhistory.revistas.csic.es/index.php/cultureandhistory/article/view/8/71.

26 Makepeace, Clare, ‘Living beyond the barbed wire: the familial ties of British prisoners of war held in Europe during the Second World War’, Historical Research, 86 (2013), pp. 158–77, 177CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 For gender as a ritualized social performance linked to the public assertion of a gendered ‘sense of self’, see Butler, Judith, Gender trouble: feminism and the subversion of identity (London, 2006; orig. edn 1990)Google Scholar. Thanks to Chris Hopkins for an illuminating conversation on the functions of the ditty box.

28 Rose, Sonya O., Which peoples' war? National identity and citizenship in Britain 1939–1945 (Oxford, 2003), pp. 151–96Google Scholar. For soldiers and masculinity, see Dawson, Graham, Soldier heroes: British adventure, empire and the imagining of masculinities (London and New York, NY, 1994)Google Scholar. For interwar constructions of gender, see Light, Alison, Forever England: literature, femininity and conservatism between the wars (London, 1991)Google Scholar.

29 Connell, R. W. and Messerschmidt, James W., ‘Hegemonic masculinity: rethinking the concept’, Gender and Society, 19 (2005), pp. 829–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 832. See also Tosh, John, ‘Hegemonic masculinity and the history of gender’, in Dudink, Stefan, Hagerman, Karen, and Tosh, John, eds., Masculinities in politics and war (Manchester, 2004), p. 47Google Scholar.

30 Robb, Linsey and Pattinson, Juliette, eds., Men, masculinities and male culture in the Second World War (Basingstoke, 2017)Google Scholar; Peniston-Bird, Corinna and Vickers, Emma, eds., Gender and the Second World War: lessons of war (Basingstoke, 2017), pp. 4052CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Pattinson, Juliette, McIvor, Arthur, and Robb, Linsey, Men in reserve: British civilian masculinities in the Second World War (Manchester, 2017)Google Scholar; Robb, Linsey, Men at work: the working man in British culture, 1939–1945 (Basingstoke, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Newlands, Emma, Civilians into soldiers: war, the body and British army recruits, 1939–1945 (Manchester, 2014)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Carden-Coyne, Ana, ed., Gender and conflict since 1914 (Basingstoke, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vickers, Emma, Queen and country: same-sex desire in the British armed forces, 1939–1945 (Manchester, 2013)Google Scholar; Noakes, Lucy, ‘“Serve to save”: gender, citizenship and civil defence in Britain, 1937–1941’, Journal of Contemporary History, 47 (2012), pp. 734–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Anderson, Julie, War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain (Manchester, 2011)Google Scholar; Summerfield, Penny and Peniston-Bird, Corinna, Contesting home defence: men, women and the home guard in the Second World War (Manchester, 2007)Google Scholar; Francis, The flyer.

31 Herzog, Dagmar, ed., Brutality and desire: war and sexuality in Europe's twentieth century (Basingstoke, 2011; orig. edn 2009), pp. 45CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Bourke, Joanna, Rape: a history since 1860 to the present (London, 2007), pp. 357–86Google Scholar, especially pp. 363, 366, 376–8; Branche, Raphaëlle and Virgili, Fabrice, eds., Rape in wartime (Basingstoke, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Goldstein, Joshua, War and gender (Cambridge, 2001), pp. 362–71, 365Google Scholar; Mulhauser, Regina, ‘Reframing sexual violence as a weapon and strategy of war: the case of German Wermacht during the war and genocide in the Soviet Union, 1941–1944’, Journal of the History of Sexuality, 26 (2017), pp. 366401CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mailänder, Elissa, ‘Making sense of a rape photograph: sexual violence as social performance on the Eastern Front, 1939–1944’, Journal of the History of Sexuality, 26 (2017), pp. 489520CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Cockburn, Cynthia, ‘Why are you doing this to me? Identity, power and sexual violence in war’, in Jonasdottir, Anna G., Bryson, Valerie, and Jones, Kathleen B., eds., Sexuality, gender and power: intersectional and transnational perspectives (New York, NY, 2011), pp. 189204Google Scholar.

32 Gullace, Nicoletta F., ‘Sexual violence and family honor: British propaganda and international law during the First World War’, American Historical Review, 102 (1997), pp. 714–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

33 See for example Bourke, Rape: a history, pp. 368–9; Roberts, Mary Louise, What soldiers do: sex and the American GI in World War II France (Chicago, IL, and London, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Petö, Andrea, ‘Memory and the narrative of rape in Budapest and Vienna’, in Bessell, R. and Schumann, D., eds., Life after death: approaches to a cultural and social history of Europe during the 1940s and 1950s (Cambridge, 2003)Google Scholar.

34 Bourke, Rape: a history, pp. 357–86, especially pp. 376–8, 366.

35 Summerfield, Penny and Crockett, Nicole, ‘“You weren't taught that with the welding”: lessons in sexuality in the Second World War’, Women's History Review, 1 (2011), pp. 435–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Summerfield, Penny, Reconstructing women's wartime lives: discourse and subjectivity in oral histories of the Second World War (Manchester, 1998), pp. 137–8, 145–8, 272–3Google Scholar; Braybon, Gail and Summerfield, Penny, Out of the cage: women's experiences in two world wars (London, 1987), pp. 205–10Google Scholar; Goodman, Women, sexuality and war, pp. 93–4; Jo Stanley, naval historian, personal discussion (2016).

36 Bourke, Rape: a history, p. 363. See also returned soldiers' reputation for rape and sexual assault after the First World War: Kent, Susan Kingsley, Aftershocks: politics and trauma in Britain, 1918–1931 (Basingstoke, 2009), pp. 35–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37 Marc Wiggam, ‘The black-out in Britain and Germany, 1939–1945’ (D.Phil. thesis, Exeter, 2011), https://ore.exeter.ac.uk/repository/bitstream/handle/10036/3246/WiggamM.pdf?sequence=2, pp. 141–59.

38 See interview with Dorothy Williams, in Summerfield and Peniston-Bird, Contesting home defence, pp. 264–5. For an illuminating discussion of shame, see Jolluck, Katherine R., ‘The nation's pain and women's shame: Polish women and wartime violence’, in Wingfield, Nancy M. and Bucur, Maria, eds., Gender and war in twentieth-century Eastern Europe (Bloomington, IN, 2006), pp. 193219Google Scholar.

39 Tim, Annette F., ‘The challenges of including sexual violence and transgressive love in historical writing in World War II and the Holocaust’, Journal of the History of Sexuality, 26 (2017), pp. 351–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

40 This has been discussed by historians in terms of men not making excessive sexual demands on women during marriage (and thereby subjecting them to too many pregnancies). See Tosh, John, A man's place: masculinity and the middle-class home in Victorian England (New Haven, CT, and London, 1999), pp. 46, 155–6Google Scholar; Roberts, Elizabeth, A woman's place: an oral history of working-class women, 1890–1940 (Oxford, 1984), p. 84Google Scholar. Kate Fisher has argued that such restraint even extended to husbands taking responsibility for contraception and being ‘considerate’ of female sexual pleasure. Fisher, Kate, Birth control, sex and marriage in Britain, 1918–1960 (Oxford, 2006)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For ‘restraint’ and ‘self-control’ as key elements in the construction of modern, bourgeois ideals of masculinity more generally, see Mosse, George L., The image of man: the creation of modern masculinity (Oxford, 1996)Google Scholar.

41 Francis, The flyer, p. 63.

42 Tosh, John, ‘The history of masculinity: an outdated concept?’, in Arnold, John and Brady, Sean, eds., What is masculinity? Historical dynamics from antiquity to the contemporary world (Basingstoke, 2011), pp. 1734Google Scholar, at p. 25.

43 Ibid., 31; Roper, Michael, ‘Slipping out of view: subjectivity and emotion in gender history’, History Workshop Journal, 59 (2005), pp. 5772CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Harvey, Karen and Shepard, Alexandra, ‘What have historians done with masculinity? Reflections on five centuries of British history, circa 1500 to 1950’, Journal of British Studies, 44 (2005), pp. 274–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 276.

44 Tosh, ‘The history of masculinity’, p. 31. Studies which focus on lived experience include Summerfield and Peniston-Bird, Contesting home defence, and Francis, The flyer. For lived experience and the working class, see Pattinson, McIvor, and Robb, Men in reserve.

45 C. Hitchison to Mrs Sansome, n.d., IWM, private papers of Mrs F. M. Sansome, box 06/53/18/8/434.

46 Pte A. Wheeler, BEF, to Mrs Steggal, n.d., IWM, WW2 Letters Re Woollen Comforts, misc 23/ item 405.

47 Barton, David and Hall, Nigel, Letter writing as social practice (Amsterdam, 1998)Google Scholar.

48 Roper, Michael, ‘Nostalgia as an emotional experience in the Great War’, Historical Journal, 54 (2011), pp. 421–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 Peter O'Dwyer to Doris Dockrill, 26 Dec. 1943.

50 Hartley, ‘Letters are everything’, p. 185.

51 Found in a letter from R. W. Warrame to Doris Dockrill, n.d. See Woman's Own, 10 Feb. 1940, p. 18: ‘Don't forget to put your name and address in with your parcel when dispatching it – the boys like to know whom they've got to thank!'

52 R. W. Warrame to Doris Dockrill, n.d.

53 A. E. Duffin to Doris Dockrill, Aug. 1941.

54 Eric Bowring to Doris Dockrill, 6 Aug. 1943.

55 Peter R. Hunt to Doris Dockrill, Nov. 1944.

56 Peter R. Hunt to Doris Dockrill, 10 Dec. 1944.

57 See Langhamer, The English in love, p. 198; and her discussion of an audience response to Brief encounter in idem., ‘Adultery in postwar England’, History Workshop Journal, 62 (2006), pp. 86–115, at p. 86.

58 Roper, The secret battle, pp. 63–8.

59 Jack Shoesmith to Doris Dockrill, 1 June 1942.

60 Peter R. Hunt to Doris Dockrill, 28 Oct. 1944.

61 Name unclear, RASC MEF to Doris Dockrill, 31 May 1944.

62 Peter O'Dwyer to Doris Dockrill, 26 Dec. 1943.

63 Ron Cotter to Doris Dockrill, n.d., 17 Mar. 1943.

64 Eric Bowring to Doris Dockrill, 10 Aug. 1943.

65 Francis, The flyer.

66 Wyndham, Joan, Love lessons: a wartime diary (London, 1985)Google Scholar, and Love is blue: a wartime diary (London, 1986).

67 Hämmerle, ‘“Waiting longingly…”’, pp. 2–3.

68 Wyss, ‘From the bridal letter’, pp. 246–7.

69 Bill Stewart to Mollie Baker, 27 Aug. 1940, IWM, private papers of Mrs M. Baker, documents 570, 88/42/1. I am aware that these apostrophes are incorrect, but I have not used [sic] to denote the many grammatical errors and spelling mistakes in Stewart's and Gibbs's writing as to do would result in their writing being peppered with my corrections and would, I believe, disrupt their flow. I have made a bracketed intervention only where the meaning is unclear.

70 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 8 Sept. 1940.

71 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 13 Dec. 1940.

72 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 18 Oct. 1940.

73 Bill Stewart to Mollie Baker, 25 Apr. 1945. The term ‘B knitters’ is both a play on ‘Knitting B’ and a reference to Stewart's playful use of the phrase the ‘Blessed Knitters’.

74 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 24 Oct. 1940.

75 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 13 Dec. 1940.

76 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 8 Sept. 1940.

77 On the issue of utility: Strawn discusses a nurse returning to the US after the First World War with reports of soldiers' complaints of blisters caused by hand-knitted goods which were put to an alternative use of rubbing down horses. Strawn, ‘American women and wartime handknitting’, p. 252. Sailors in the Second World War would sometimes give their knitted comforts (in exchange for extra rum rations) to men who then unravelled them and sent the wool home for their wives to knit up for the family. Personal correspondence with George Harris, whose father-in-law was a petty officer on a corvette, 13 Nov. 2018.

78 Bill Stewart to Mollie Baker, 27 Aug. 1940. See also J. Plumstead to Doris Dockrill: ‘Personally, when much younger, I could do a bit of plain, but when it came to more complicated stuff like purl – well I was at a loss. How the Dickens you manage to get round corners without breaking needles is beyond me.’ 22 June, no year.

79 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, Oct. 1940.

80 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 29 Oct. 1941, 4 Jan. 1941.

81 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 24 Oct. 1940.

82 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 25 Feb. 1941.

83 A number of the men were unconfident letter writers. See for example Jack Storey, 25 Oct. 1940, and James Bore, 1 Nov. 1941, both to Mollie Baker. British men were in all probability less well acquainted with the art of letter writing than their continental European brothers. British children were not introduced to letter writing until their final year of the elementary curriculum; not all would have stayed in school that long. Vincent, David, Literacy and popular culture: England, 1750–1914 (Cambridge, 1989), pp. 51, 89CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hanna, 1914–1918-online.net, p. 4. For the emphasis on honest, heartfelt letter writing in French elementary education, see Hanna, Martha, ‘A republic of letters: the epistolary tradition in France during World War One’, American Historical Review, 108 (2003), pp. 1338–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

84 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, Oct. 1940.

85 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 18 Oct. 1940, 19 Dec. 1940.

86 Bill Stewart to Mollie Baker, 12 Dec. 1940.

87 Teo, Hsu-Ming, ‘Love writes: gender and romantic love in Australian love letters, 1860–1960’, Australian Feminist Studies, 20 (2005), pp. 343–61CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

88 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 12 Feb. 1941.

89 Sam Gibbs to Mollie Baker, 25 Feb. 1941.

90 Altman, Epistolarity, p. 89.

91 Jolly, Margaretta and Stanley, Liz, ‘Letters as / not a genre’, Life Writing, 2 (2005), pp. 91118CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 93.

92 There is more work to be done on the subject of patriotic femininity, especially the emphasis on women boosting morale through their sex appeal, and the relationship of this to the emphasis on modesty and sexual ignorance, the valorization of romance and vulnerability to predatory masculinity. See my unpublished paper, ‘“Dear Norah, why did you take my letter the wrong way, it was not intended to hurt or corrupt…”: danger, desire and patriotic femininity in Britain during WW2’. For patriotic femininity, see Goodman, Women, sexuality and war; Kirkham, Pat, ‘Keeping up home front morale: “beauty and duty” in wartime Britain’, in Atkins, Jacqueline M., ed., Wearing propaganda: textiles on the home front in Japan, Britain, and the United States, 1931–1945 (New Haven, CT, and London, 2005), pp. 205–27Google Scholar; Rose, Which peoples' war?

93 Due to some ethical considerations, I have anonymized Jim and Danny Gilbert.

94 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 26 Feb. 1941. Letters in my possession.

95 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 26 Feb. 1941, 5 Mar. 1941, 14 Mar. 1941.

96 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 24 Mar. 1941, 5 Apr. 1941.

97 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 12 Apr. 1941.

98 Newlands, Civilians into soldiers, p. 136; Wadham, Ben, ‘Brotherhood’, Australian Feminist Studies, 28 (2013), pp. 212–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

99 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 12 Apr. 1941.

100 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 17 Apr. 1941.

101 Conley, Mary A., From Jack Tar to Union Jack: representing naval manhood in the British Empire, 1870–1918 (Manchester, 2009), pp. 3, 194–5Google Scholar; Begiato, Joanne, ‘Tears and the manly sailor in England, c. 1760–1860’, Journal for Maritime Research, 17 (2015), pp. 117–33CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

102 McKee, Christopher, Sober men and true: sailor lives in the Royal Navy, 1900–1945 (Cambridge, MA, 2002), pp. 33, 165–89Google Scholar.

103 Ibid., p. 178.

104 Peniston-Bird, Corinna, ‘Classifying the body in the Second World War: British men in and out of uniform’, Body and Society, 9 (2003), pp. 3148CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 45.

105 Connell, R. W., Masculinities (Cambridge, 1995)Google Scholar.

106 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 12 Apr. 1941. On 17 June, he wrote: ‘I would like to see you in your school outfit, I understand (shy). I wonder if you would send some school snaps…Yours more than imagination.’

107 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 28 June 1942.

108 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 7 July 1942, 25 Jan. 1945. For Norah's response to Jim Gilbert's letters, see Twells, Alison, ‘“Went into raptures”: reading emotion in the ordinary wartime diary, 1941–1946’, Women's History Review, 25 (2015), 143–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

109 Discussions with Gertie Whitfield, former Personal, Social and Health Education adviser, Derbyshire County Council, 2018. See also Samantha Craven, ‘Deconstructing perspectives of sexual grooming: implications for theory and practice’ (D.Phil. thesis, Coventry, 2009); Whittle, Helen, Hamilton-Giachritsis, Catherine, Beech, Antony, and Collings, Guy, ‘A review of young people's vulnerabilities to online grooming’, Aggression and Violent Behavior, 18 (2013), pp. 6270CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

110 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, various letters, 1941–5.

111 Jim Gilbert to Norah Hodgkinson, 20 Oct. 1947.

112 Bourke, Joanna, ‘Unwanted intimacy: violent sexual transfers in British and American societies, 1870s to 1970s’, European Journal of English Studies, 9 (2006), pp. 287–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at pp. 288, 294.

113 Bourke, Rape: a history.

114 Mailänder, ‘Making sense of a rape photograph’. Feminist discussions of the sexual scripts leading to predatory male sexuality go back to the 1970s. See Jackson, Stevi, ‘The social context of rape: sexual scripts and motivation’, Women's Studies International Quarterly, 1 (1978), pp. 2739CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

115 Francis, The flyer, p. 85. See also John Tosh: ‘What we most lack is analyses of experience of combat and its impact on peacetime masculine conduct…’: Tosh, ‘The history of masculinity’, p. 24.