Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World War by Tammy Proctor

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: June 2003
  • 221pp
  • Sales Rank: 527,448
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 2003
    • Publisher: New York University Press
    • Format: Hardcover, 221pp
    • Sales Rank: 527,448

    Synopsis

    When the Germans invaded her small Belgian village in 1914, Marthe Cnockaert's home was burned and her family separated. After getting a job at a German hospital, and winning the Iron Cross for her service to the Reich, she was approached by a neighbor and invited to become an intelligence agent for the British. Not without trepidation, Cnockaert embarked on a career as a spy, providing information and engaging in sabotage before her capture and imprisonment in 1916. After the war, she was paid and decorated by a grateful British government for her service.

    Cnockaert's is only one of the surprising and gripping stories that comprise Female Intelligence. This is the first history of the female spies who served Britain during World War I, focusing on both the powerful cultural images of these women and the realities, challenges, and contradictions of intelligence service. Between the founding of modern British intelligence organizations in 1909 and the demobilization of 1919, more than 6,000 women served the British government in either civil or military occupations as members of the intelligence community. These women performed a variety of services, and they represented an astonishing diversity of nationality, age, and class. From Aphra Behn, who spied for the British government in the seventeenth century, to the most well known example, Mata Hari, female spies have a long history, existing in juxtaposition to the folkloric notion of women as chatty, gossipy, and indiscreet.

    Using personal accounts, letters, official documents and newspaper reports, Female Intelligence interrogates different, and apparently contradictory, constructions of gender in thecompeting spheres of espionage activity.

    The New Yorker

    The image of the seductive female agent frightened and fascinated people even before Mata Hari faced a French firing squad, in 1917. Not only did it tap into fears about women's treachery, but it distinguished between the government-intelligence bureaucracy and the more dangerous and romantic aspects of espionage. In Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World War, Tammy Proctor attempts to rescue female spies from clichés that classed them as either sexual predators or martyred virgins, manipulators or dupes, heartless vamps or emotional basket cases.

    Elizabeth Bentley, the subject of Lauren Kessler's Clever Girl: Elizabeth Bentley and the Dawn of the Mc Carthy Era, fell into the latter camp--more a depressive than a femme fatale. A Communist spy while her K.G.B. lover was alive, Bentley came clean to the F.B.I., which led to the first of the McCarthy-era witch-hunts. Later in life, lonely and alcoholic, she was reduced to supporting herself with speaking fees and an overwrought memoir.

    The anonymous author of Terrorist Hunter: The Extraordinary Story of a Woman Who Went Undercover to Infiltrate the Radical Islamic Groups Operating in America, an Iraqi-born Jew, has spent years disguising herself to attend Muslim rallies and conferences. When she was a child, her father was executed by Saddam Hussein as an alleged Israeli agent--a trauma she thinks led her into the spy game. But she's aware of the equivocal nature of her profession: lecturing a pair of F.B.I. agents, she is delighted to see them dumbfounded at her competence; earlier, she says, "they'd been ogling me."

    (Kate Taylor)

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    Biography

    Tammy M. Proctor is Associate Professor of History at Wittenberg University in Springfield, Ohio.

    Customer Reviews

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    Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World Warby Anonymous

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    March 17, 2004: This is a wonderful book that opens up a new chapter in the history of spies. Going far beyond the iconic Mata Hari, the author grounds her engaging material in solid historical scholarship of the First World War and women's history in general. The book interweaves cultural studies analysis of the image of the female spy, with the social history of lived experience and actual people. It is a history book which you will not want to put down.