'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945. / Seidenfaden, Emil Eiby.

In: Historisk Tidsskrift, Vol. 122, No. 1, 07.2022, p. 87-120.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Seidenfaden, EE 2022, ''Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945', Historisk Tidsskrift, vol. 122, no. 1, pp. 87-120. <https://tidsskrift.dk/historisktidsskrift/article/view/132925>

APA

Seidenfaden, E. E. (2022). 'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945. Historisk Tidsskrift, 122(1), 87-120. https://tidsskrift.dk/historisktidsskrift/article/view/132925

Vancouver

Seidenfaden EE. 'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945. Historisk Tidsskrift. 2022 Jul;122(1):87-120.

Author

Seidenfaden, Emil Eiby. / 'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945. In: Historisk Tidsskrift. 2022 ; Vol. 122, No. 1. pp. 87-120.

Bibtex

@article{7c4b831b883c454cbeaf019123e3019b,
title = "'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945",
abstract = "This article examines the journalists who belonged to the expatriate community in London 1940–1945. Based on archival material from Danish and British archives, it revisits a topic that has largely been approached within Danish resistance-historiography, now observing it through a transnational lens. It contemplates the expatriate community as a field of informal diplomacy in which journalists came to assume key roles. It maps the navigation of allegiances between the journalists and, on the one hand, the Free Danish movement in Britain and Sweden, and, on the other, British propaganda and intelligence agencies targeting Scandinavia. It argues that drawing on their international experience and networks, expatriate journalists came to function as “moderators” and liaison officers that smoothened relations between the expatriate community and British officials in the Foreign Office and the Political Warfare Executive. Thus, a group of journalists returned to Denmark after the war, bringing the experience of informal diplomacy with them. One may well ask about the legacy of this wartime intermezzo in post-war history of the press, given that many of them entered either the foreign service or assumed influential positions at leading newspapers.",
author = "Seidenfaden, {Emil Eiby}",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
language = "Dansk",
volume = "122",
pages = "87--120",
journal = "Historisk Tidsskrift",
issn = "0018-263X",
publisher = "Universitetsforlaget AS",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - 'Gentlemen of the Press'. Danske journalister i britisk eksil, 1940-1945

AU - Seidenfaden, Emil Eiby

PY - 2022/7

Y1 - 2022/7

N2 - This article examines the journalists who belonged to the expatriate community in London 1940–1945. Based on archival material from Danish and British archives, it revisits a topic that has largely been approached within Danish resistance-historiography, now observing it through a transnational lens. It contemplates the expatriate community as a field of informal diplomacy in which journalists came to assume key roles. It maps the navigation of allegiances between the journalists and, on the one hand, the Free Danish movement in Britain and Sweden, and, on the other, British propaganda and intelligence agencies targeting Scandinavia. It argues that drawing on their international experience and networks, expatriate journalists came to function as “moderators” and liaison officers that smoothened relations between the expatriate community and British officials in the Foreign Office and the Political Warfare Executive. Thus, a group of journalists returned to Denmark after the war, bringing the experience of informal diplomacy with them. One may well ask about the legacy of this wartime intermezzo in post-war history of the press, given that many of them entered either the foreign service or assumed influential positions at leading newspapers.

AB - This article examines the journalists who belonged to the expatriate community in London 1940–1945. Based on archival material from Danish and British archives, it revisits a topic that has largely been approached within Danish resistance-historiography, now observing it through a transnational lens. It contemplates the expatriate community as a field of informal diplomacy in which journalists came to assume key roles. It maps the navigation of allegiances between the journalists and, on the one hand, the Free Danish movement in Britain and Sweden, and, on the other, British propaganda and intelligence agencies targeting Scandinavia. It argues that drawing on their international experience and networks, expatriate journalists came to function as “moderators” and liaison officers that smoothened relations between the expatriate community and British officials in the Foreign Office and the Political Warfare Executive. Thus, a group of journalists returned to Denmark after the war, bringing the experience of informal diplomacy with them. One may well ask about the legacy of this wartime intermezzo in post-war history of the press, given that many of them entered either the foreign service or assumed influential positions at leading newspapers.

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

VL - 122

SP - 87

EP - 120

JO - Historisk Tidsskrift

JF - Historisk Tidsskrift

SN - 0018-263X

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 333305854