Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
375904 | Women's Studies International Forum | 2014 | 12 Pages |
•Women's militarization shaped by interplay of transgression and containment•Women's proximity to combat varied with military exigencies•Restoration of society's gender order the paramount objective in post-war period•Women combatants ignored in war commemorations as indicative of imperiled nation
SynopsisThe militarization of women during the Second World War, unprecedented in both quantitative and qualitative terms, has been accounted for variously, though unsatisfactorily, with regard to the impact on the warring nations' gender order. Using national variations in the accessibility of combat functions to women, the degree of pressure exerted on a given war-time society's gender order is explored by comparing Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union, which differ markedly regarding both the military exigencies placed upon them and the degree of female militarization adopted. The comparative perspective reveals differences in what dimensions are perceived as problematic in the relation of gender and combat and what are the conditions shaping this perception. Secondly, the conditions become apparent under which combat functions are made available to women, and thirdly, the long-term effects of the reconfiguration of the gender order under war-time conditions can be explored.