Корично изображение Електронна книга

Gender and war in twentieth-century Eastern Europe /

This volume explores the role of gender on both the home and fighting fronts in eastern Europe during World Wars I and II. By using gender as a category of analysis, the authors seek to arrive at a more nuanced understanding of the subjective nature of wartime experiences and representations. While...

Пълно описание

Други автори: Wingfield, Nancy M., Bucur-Deckard, Maria, 1968-
Формат: Електронна книга
Език: English
Публикувано: Bloomington : Indiana University Press, ℗♭2006.
Серия: Indiana-Michigan series in Russian and East European studies.
Предмети:
Онлайн достъп: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=179859
Подобни документи: Print version:: Gender and war in twentieth-century Eastern Europe.
Съдържание:
  • Introduction : gender and war in twentieth-century Eastern Europe / Nancy M. Wingfield and Maria Bucur
  • Challenging gender roles/restoring order
  • "Female generals" and "Siberian angels" : aristocratic nurses and the Austro-Hungarian POW relief / Alon Rachamimov
  • Civilizing the soldier in postwar Austria / Maureen Healy
  • Between Red Army and White Guard : women in Budapest, 1919 / Eliza Ablovatski
  • Gendered collaborating and resisting
  • Dumplings and domesticity : women, collaboration, and resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia / Melissa Feinberg
  • Denouncers and fraternizers : gender, collaboration, and retribution in Bohemia and Moravia during World War II and after / Benjamin Frommer
  • Family, gender, and ideology in World War II Latvia / Mara Lazda
  • Remembering war : gendered bodies, gendered stories
  • Kosovo maiden(s) : Serbian women commemorate the wars of national liberation, 1912-1918 / Melissa Bokovoy
  • Women's stories as sites of memory : gender and remembering Romania's world wars / Maria Bucur
  • The nation's pain and women's shame : Polish women and wartime violence / Katherine R. Jolluck
  • "The alienated body" : gender identity and the memory of the Siege of Leningrad / Lisa A. Kirschenbaum.