Masquerade

Treason, the Holocaust, and an Irish Impostor

Nonfiction, History, Military, World War II, Biography & Memoir, Political
Cover of the book Masquerade by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes, University of Oklahoma Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes ISBN: 9780806158358
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press Publication: May 18, 2017
Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press Language: English
Author: Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
ISBN: 9780806158358
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Publication: May 18, 2017
Imprint: University of Oklahoma Press
Language: English

Phyllis Ursula James. Nora O’Mara. Róisín Ní Mheara. Like her name, the life of Rosaleen James changed many times as she followed a convoluted path from abandoned child, to foster daughter of an aristocratic British family, to traitor during World War II, to her emergence as a full Irish woman afterward. In Masquerade, authors Mark M. Hull and Vera Moynes tell James’s story as it unfolds against the backdrop of the most important events of the twentieth century. James’s life—both real and imagined—makes for an incredible but true story.

By altering her identity to suit the situation, James manipulated almost everyone she encountered: the German intelligence service, the Nazi propaganda broadcasting service, British intelligence, and various Irish cultural groups. She was in a liaison with Irish writer Francis Stuart and, with him, provided a voice for Nazi radio programs aimed at neutral Ireland, served as the pseudo-Irish expert for German espionage missions, and participated in the failed, almost comical effort to recruit Irish prisoners of war to join the Nazis against Great Britain—quite a series of performances, considering her only contact with Ireland had been a weeklong visit in 1937.

Immediately after the war, James was wanted by British intelligence as a “renegade” (traitor), but her case was quickly squelched by the British government. Drawing on an assumed wartime persona, she became fluent in Irish Gaelic and organized a number of conferences for which she won grants from the Irish government. James garnered wider attention in 1992 with her autobiography, published in Gaelic, in which she claimed that the Holocaust was a myth—a belief she maintained until her death in 2013.

In documenting James’s life of deception, Hull and Moynes masterfully analyze how an intellectually gifted child turned traitor to her country and convincingly rebranded herself as an Irish patriot and intellectual, while denying historical reality. The story of Rosaleen James reminds us that reality may be much less—or more—than what meets the eye and ear.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Phyllis Ursula James. Nora O’Mara. Róisín Ní Mheara. Like her name, the life of Rosaleen James changed many times as she followed a convoluted path from abandoned child, to foster daughter of an aristocratic British family, to traitor during World War II, to her emergence as a full Irish woman afterward. In Masquerade, authors Mark M. Hull and Vera Moynes tell James’s story as it unfolds against the backdrop of the most important events of the twentieth century. James’s life—both real and imagined—makes for an incredible but true story.

By altering her identity to suit the situation, James manipulated almost everyone she encountered: the German intelligence service, the Nazi propaganda broadcasting service, British intelligence, and various Irish cultural groups. She was in a liaison with Irish writer Francis Stuart and, with him, provided a voice for Nazi radio programs aimed at neutral Ireland, served as the pseudo-Irish expert for German espionage missions, and participated in the failed, almost comical effort to recruit Irish prisoners of war to join the Nazis against Great Britain—quite a series of performances, considering her only contact with Ireland had been a weeklong visit in 1937.

Immediately after the war, James was wanted by British intelligence as a “renegade” (traitor), but her case was quickly squelched by the British government. Drawing on an assumed wartime persona, she became fluent in Irish Gaelic and organized a number of conferences for which she won grants from the Irish government. James garnered wider attention in 1992 with her autobiography, published in Gaelic, in which she claimed that the Holocaust was a myth—a belief she maintained until her death in 2013.

In documenting James’s life of deception, Hull and Moynes masterfully analyze how an intellectually gifted child turned traitor to her country and convincingly rebranded herself as an Irish patriot and intellectual, while denying historical reality. The story of Rosaleen James reminds us that reality may be much less—or more—than what meets the eye and ear.

More books from University of Oklahoma Press

Cover of the book Over the Santa Fe Trail to Mexico by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Victorio by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book The Trial of Tom Horn by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Contesting the Borderlands by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book The Black Regulars, 1866–1898 by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Ruined City by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Portrait of Route 66 by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Color Coded by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Going for Broke by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Through Indian Sign Language by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Shot in Oklahoma by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Reservations, Removal, and Reform by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book The Darkest Period by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book Native American Placenames of the Southwest by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
Cover of the book A Decent, Orderly Lynching by Mark M. Hull, Vera Moynes
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy