Available Formats
Home/Front: The Military, War and Gender in Twentieth-Century Germany
By (Author) Karen Hagemann
Edited by Stefanie Schler-Springorum
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Berg Publishers
1st December 2002
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
European history
Warfare and defence
355.008209430904
Hardback
408
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 18mm
We are all acutely aware of the devastation and upheaval that result from war. Less obvious is the extent to which the military and war impact on the gender order. This book is the first to explore the intersections of the military, war and gender in twentieth-century Germany from a variety of different perspectives. Its authors investigate the relevance of the military and war for the formation of gender relations and their representation as well as for the construction of individual and social agency for both genders in civil society and the military. They inquire about the origins and development of gendered images as they were shaped by war. They expound on the multifarious mechanisms that served to reconstruct or newly form gender relations in the postwar periods. They analyze the participation of women and men in the creation of wars as well as the gender-specific meaning of their respective roles. Finally, they investigate the different ways of remembering and coming to terms with the two great military conflicts of the very violent twentieth century. The book focuses on the period before, during and after the two World Wars, closely linked total wars' that mobilized both the front' and the home-front' and increasingly blurred the boundaries between them. Drawing on sources ranging from forces newspapers to German pilot literature, police reports on women's food riots to oral history interviews with soldiers' wives, the richly documented case studies of Home/Front add the long-overdue gender dimension to the cultural and historical debates that surround these two great military conflicts.
Karen Hagemann DAAD Visiting Professor for German and European Studies,Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto Stefanie Schuler-Springorum Director, Institute for the History of German Jews, Hamburg