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‘These people know what they're fighting for’: Denis Johnston and the Partisans

Woodward, Guy

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Abstract

In March 1944 the dramatist and BBC radio correspondent Denis Johnston travelled to the Croatian island of Vis, to record spoken and sung contributions by Yugoslav Partisans and British Royal Air Force officers stationed there. Examining Johnston's wartime memoir Nine Rivers From Jordan alongside his broadcasts, manuscripts and notebooks, this essay considers the visit as a moment of imaginative liberation and escape, made possible both by Vis's utopian status as an island free from Nazi occupation and by the egalitarian social environment that he found there. Johnston's accounts are not entirely celebratory however, and the register of escape is complicated by the affinities he detects between the landscape of Vis and that of the West of Ireland, and between the communist Partisans and Irish Republicans.

Citation

Woodward, G. (2018). ‘These people know what they're fighting for’: Denis Johnston and the Partisans. Irish University Review, 48(2), 331-347. https://doi.org/10.3366/iur.2018.0358

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Oct 31, 2018
Publication Date Nov 1, 2018
Deposit Date Oct 17, 2018
Publicly Available Date Nov 8, 2018
Journal Irish University Review
Print ISSN 0021-1427
Electronic ISSN 2047-2153
Publisher Edinburgh University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 48
Issue 2
Pages 331-347
DOI https://doi.org/10.3366/iur.2018.0358
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1315973

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