'Bright Chaps for Hush-Hush Jobs': Masculinity, Class and Civilians in Uniform at Bletchley Park

Title'Bright Chaps for Hush-Hush Jobs': Masculinity, Class and Civilians in Uniform at Bletchley Park
Publication TypeBook Chapter
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsSmith, Chris
EditorRobb, Linsey, and Juliette Pattinson
Book TitleMen, Masculinities and Male Culture in the Second World War
Pagination145-167
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
CityLondon
Abstract

During the Second World War the Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS), headquartered at the now famous Bletchley Park, was tasked with collecting, deciphering and reading Axis wireless communications traffic. Agency recruitment and management strategies were heavily coloured by internal, dominant notions of masculinity, which revolved around class- and gender-based assumptions within wider British society. Many men were drawn from Britain’s oldest universities, and masculinity in the agency was of a decidedly civilian character by 1939. However, a rapid wartime influx of military men posed a significant challenge to this internal masculine culture. The result was that GC&CS developed its own peculiar wartime hierarchy of masculinity, a hybrid of the competing notions derived from its primary sources of recruitment.

URLhttps://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057/978-1-349-95290-8_7
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1011229001

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