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Name, Rank, and Serial Number
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part I: Over There
1. Limited War Sets the Stage for the POW Odyssey
2. The Middle Passage: Life-Changing Horrors in the First Year of Captivity
3. Andersonville East: Communist Prisoners are Pressured to Defect
4. Welcome, Fellow Peasant: The Chinese Seek Converts
5. POWL: Prisoners of Limited War Languish as Propaganda Becomes a Substitute for Victory
6. The Failure of Chinese Indoctrination
7. The United Nations Command Withholds POWs

Part II: Over Here
8. Home to Cheers and Jeers
9. The Brainwashing Dilemma: Atrocity Reports Undermine Punishment
10. Prosecutions Rile the Nation
11. Target Mom: Disciplining "Misplaced Sympathy"
12. Missing Action: Hollywood Films Try and Fail to Fix Captivity
13. The Hidden Reason for Forgetting Korea
Conclusion: Two Wars, the Visible and the Cloaked

Notes
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Charles S. Young is Associate Professor of History, Southern Arkansas University.

Reviews

"Young's book serves up a diplomatic-history-meets-pow saga that transforms the story of both American and communist prisoners of war into a cautionary tale of the deliberate politicization of war and its unintended consequences....[I]mmeasurably valuable to every citizen of the republic."--Journal of American History
"Charles Young has written a sensitive, riveting, balanced, well-researched, and highly readable book that has a surprising contemporary relevance, given the Bush administration's torture of POWs. Young examines how all sides dealt with POWs in Korea, especially the treatment of POWs by the US and South Korea (something usually overlooked in such accounts), and knocks down any number of myths about 'brainwashing.' This is a well-informed, critical and truly
important addition to a literature that is surprisingly small, but intensely pertinent."--Bruce Cumings, author of The Korean War: A History
"Charles Young adroitly rescues his subjects from decades of obscurity and puts prisoners of war where they belong: at the center of the Korean War story. Based on extensive archival research and fresh oral history interviews, Name, Rank, and Serial Number is accessible, empathetic, and thoroughly persuasive."--Susan L. Carruthers, author of Cold War Captives: Imprisonment, Escape and Brainwashing
"This is an original and valuable addition to both the political and the cultural history of the Korean War. Charles Young convincingly shows that Washington's manipulation of the POW issue added two years to the war and thus doubled the number of U.S. casualties. He then gives us a nuanced vision of how this manipulation led to a destructive reimagining of the POWs in American culture."--H. Bruce Franklin, author of M.I.A. or Mythmaking in America
"This well-written, provocative book is especially valuable for its analysis of the treatment of returning prisoners-of-war in the context of U.S. culture during the 1950s."--William Stueck, author of Rethinking the Korean War

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