History of Feminism
Related: About this forumThe mighty women of World War I
The mighty women of World War IBy Belinda Davis
Wed July 2, 2014
(CNN) -- Some 100 years ago, a woman in Pittsburgh or St. Denis in France or Petrograd, Russia, might have awakened at dawn, while her young children slept, to prepare for her first shift at a nearby munitions factory. Her husband, off fighting in World War I, had left her to test the limits of her own physical ability, as she provided food, shelter, warmth for her family, sometimes confronting great physical danger at work -- perhaps, for example, hanging suspended to load powerful explosives into the shells that other women had produced.
When her work day was done, she went looking for food to buy, often standing in line for hours for scarce basic goods, scrounged for hard-to-come-by fuel to feed the furnace and cooked dinner. She washed the children, put them to bed, cleaned up and wrote a letter to her husband, keeping her worry off the page, before sleeping a few hours. And then she got up and did it again...
...The war changed life for women, and it changed the women themselves. When men returned from war, they inevitably tried to reassert their dominance in family and society. But their own broken conditions and circumstances at home challenged these attempts.
Women once again had to navigate a tricky terrain laid by men. Yet women had displayed to the world and to themselves their competence in "total war." Indeed, the war created a lasting legacy for women, marked by new political rights in many countries -- and marked also by widespread and enduring anxiety over rising feminine power....
MORE at http://www.cnn.com/2014/07/01/opinion/davis-world-war-i-women/index.html?iid=article_sidebar
ismnotwasm
(42,482 posts)sheshe2
(88,302 posts)theHandpuppet
(19,964 posts)I found this article most interesting because I witnessed this same kind of dynamic years ago when I worked at the shipyards in Norfolk. Sailors who would be off to sea for months at a time, multiple deployments, while their wives were left at home to take care of the kids, the house, the bills, often holding down a job of their own. Then daddy would suddenly show up again, sometimes a virtual stranger to his family and expect that upon crossing the threshold he was to be treated as king of the castle again. You could almost visualize the psychological whiplash going on with many of these women. Some could take it but many could not and I fully understood why.
sheshe2
(88,302 posts)"A woman who followed her own factory shift with dancing or a quick drink at the pub confronted public accusations of being a "flaunting flapper" or an "amateur girl"effectively a prostitute--even as fellow male workers and soldiers on leave might proposition and harass her.
From your link. Thanks tHp.