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PAPERS

Invisible Targets, Strengthened Morale: Static Camouflage as a ‘Weapon of the Weak’

Pages 351-368 | Received 01 Mar 2012, Accepted 01 Jul 2012, Published online: 07 Nov 2012
 

Abstract

In the natural world, camouflage is habitually deployed by ‘vulnerable’ creatures to deceive predators. Such protective strategies have been culturally, socially and technologically translated into human societies, whereby camouflage has been used to mask intentions, actions, feelings and valuable objects or spaces. Through the material presence of such techniques, everyday spaces can become inscribed as places of sanctuary. Focusing on British civil camouflage work of the 1930s and 1940s, this paper explores the historical, cultural and political connotations of camouflage and how the attainment of invisibility, as a ‘weapon of the weak’, can both physically and affectively protect urban populations.

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