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Author: Sam Skow Course: "Women in Modern European Societies" Course Number: 80511 Faculty Sponsor: Dr. Mona Siegel 1 Sexual Distortions and the First Modern War: In 1914 modern industrial warfare exploded in Europe. Realized by a perfect storm of Western industrialism, imperialism, militarism, and nationalism, the "Great War" rallied the major powers of Europe to fight the first modern war. A devastating war of attrition, World War I demanded total commitment from all its combatants. All men of fighting age were encouraged and ultimately drafted to defend their mother countries. Women at home were likewise urged to "do their bit" to keep their respective nations running. As men left their jobs at home to endure, and inflict upon others, the horrors of industrial warfare, women supported the men at the front and moved into the jobs these men had left behind. Because women worked a variety of new jobs and enjoyed a social freedom unknown during peacetime, the war appeared to upend Europe's patriarchal sexual order, emancipating women and emasculating men. But, however divergent sexual divisions may have appeared during World War I, wartime divisions were actually elaborations on traditional domestic spheres. Reshaped by nationalists for militaristic purposes, male and female domestic roles, with men serving as protectors and women as sustainers, were reconceived and reapplied to the nations at war. World War I was set in motion by a combination of imperial, martial, economic, and political factors. By 1914, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Germany, France, England, Ottoman Turkey, and Italy had negotiated Europe into its latest configuration of national boundaries. These boundaries constituted triumphs for some, and tragic losses for others still. Most notably between France and Germany, where open hostilities had barely cooled since the FrancoPrussian War less than five decades earlier, France's loss and Germany's gain of Alsace-Lorraine resulted in mounting tension between these contiguous rivals. Tension in Europe was exacerbated by colonialism abroad. Brutal colonial operations required a steady supply of ever 2 deadlier military technology. Over time, these steady supplies grew into mountainous stockpiles. Committed to their own imperial expansion and suspicious of their expansionistic neighbors, the imperial powers of Europe developed a system of alliances. The Triple Alliance, formed in 1882, aligned Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy; the Triple Entente, formed in 1906, united France, Great Britain, and Russia. Following this crude geopolitical matrix, any conflict between any two actors from opposing sides could quickly embroil all of Europe. The war's immediate catalyst— the assassination of the Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914 by a Serbian nationalist—demonstrated the precariousness of pre-war peace in Europe. Exactly one month later, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia, igniting a chain reaction of declarations from Russia, Germany, France, England, and, leaving the Alliance and joining Entente Forces in May 1915, Italy. By August 1914, with Turkey signing the GermanOttoman Alliance, most of Europe was at war. At the war's outset, European men and women largely rallied to the flag. Conceptually, historian Françoise Thébaud notes, "People did not reject . . . war, because they were mentally prepared for it."1 In disproportionate numbers to women, men favored the war and wrongly, but persuasively, predicted its quick conclusion. Across Europe, most women, including many feminists, patriotically applauded the gallant young men in uniform parading through their nation's major cities. As this naive multinational first wave of men proudly marched off to the front, women volunteered to support them and sustain the national economy at home. After decades of internal political discord concerning the "woman question," the men and women of industrial Europe had finally found a cause the majority could agree upon: the war. As Thébaud explains, "It was a strange summer . . . that radically segregated the sexes while restoring . . . a 1 Françoise Thébaud, "The Great War and the Triumph of Sexual Division," In A History of Women in the West, Volume V, edited by Françoise Thébaud (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994), 25. 3 modicum of sexual harmony."2 The sexual division of labor required to wage total warfare has produced historical questions concerning men's emasculation and women's emancipation. During World War I, millions of men were trapped in filthy, disease-ridden trenches, and massacred by their enemy's ever-deadlier weaponry. Historians wonder if, as the war's punishing realities obliterated all fantasies of chivalric warfare, men's masculinity was likewise assaulted. Objectified as warriors and used as fodder, did men feel their sexual identities diminish? Conversely, compelled by convention, necessity, and patriotism to replace men in the workforce, did women expand their social identities? Women mobilized to support men's efforts at the front and to fill labor absences at home. Even in the war's earliest days during harvest season, when men left their work in the fields for the front, women assumed these typically masculine jobs. As the war dragged on, nations had a growing list of needs to be filled. In addition to continuing what declining work was left in light industry, domestic service, and retail, women took up new jobs in munitions and other heavy manufacturing, in heavy metal mining, and in clerical work. Moreover, as drivers, streetcar conductors, and mechanics, women also assumed traditionally masculine roles in society. At the front, women worked in auxiliary capacities, as transport drivers, cooks, and secretaries. Tending to the constant influx of dead and dying men, they also served by the thousands as nurses and ambulance drivers. Dramatized in Helen Zenna Smith's novel, Not So Quiet . . ., young, British female ambulance drivers struggled under the harsh working conditions, cruel discipline, and nightmarish carnage of war to "do their bit" for the nation.3 Women were critical, dynamic, and visible participants in World War I. 1989). 2 3 Thébaud, 26. Helen Zenna Smith, Not So Quiet . . . Stepdaughters of War (1930; repr., New York: The Feminist Press, 4 Women also helped raise pivotal public support for the war. Having excelled in decades past at political organization, many feminists championed the new cause. Actively rallying women to serve at the front, former suffragette firebrands, like Englishwoman Emmeline Pankhurst, committed all their political energies to the pro-war campaign. Many feminists understood the war as a means to attain suffrage, so they tied their political aspirations to patriotic exuberance. An ideological schism between feminists, for and against the war, soon arose. The split within the Pankhurst family poignantly represents this division. As Emmeline and her daughter Christabel enlisted volunteers, her other daughter Sylvia agitated against the war. The disobedient Pankhurst also worked to help the poor, a group most heavily taxed by the fighting.4 A majority of women actively promoted the war, and, along with men in power, ostracized a vocal minority for their dissent. Pacifist dissent was a compelling illustration of women's emancipation. A vocal minority of feminist pacifists decried the war for its senseless destruction. In April 1915, the Women's Peace Congress met at The Hague to outline a plan to speed the war's end. In 1919, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom convened in Zurich to map the postwar peace and its provisions for women's rights. More radical feminists also criticized the war for its destructive gender designations. Referring to the anonymous English pamphlet Militarism Versus Feminism, historian Sandi E. Cooper succinctly states the feminist pacifists' position, that "[War] reified domestic . . . [and] . . . international violence and perpetuated a brute male in dominant social positions. Women become permanently subjected, forced to reproduce the species to make war."5 Ironically, a compelling example of women's emancipation during World War I came from this small minority of feminists who argued that war would always have the opposite 4 Sandi E. Cooper, "Women in War and Peace, "In Becoming Visible: Women in European History, ed. Renate Bridenthal, et al (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998), 442. 5 Ibid., 444. 5 effect: the subjugation of women to violent male dominance. Historians often identify men tortured by wartime violence and degradation as proof of men's emasculation. Trench warfare—which juxtaposed intense scenes of efficient butchery with excruciating periods of tense inactivity—physically and mentally shattered many men. Many veterans left the battlefields physically disfigured to face social and economic rejection at home. Many receiving countrymen were repulsed by returning soldiers' physical deformities. Viewed through a militarist's lens, these walking testaments to war's miseries were bad for the war effort. Society also regarded "shell shocked" veterans as less than men. Historian Joanna Bourke finds in her research of British and Irish shell-shock victims that "Despite the unique frightfulness associated with modern . . . warfare, it was widely accepted that the 'abnormal' men were those . . . repelled by wartime violence. These men had to be cured: that is, they had to rediscover their 'natural', masculine bellicosity."6 Shell-shocked veterans were disproportionately composed of soldiers who had failed to kill anyone, a failure as men in war's imposed sexual order.7 Though these victims of war likely felt emasculated as they were subjected to "treatment" by government doctors who regarded them as cowards and lunatics, Bourke reminds her readers, "The emphasis on emotional breakdown and psychiatric illness has obscured the fact that most men coped remarkably well with the demands being made upon them in wartime."8 This tragic minority of emasculated men does not prove men's overall emasculation. Concurring with pacifist feminists, war is the ultimate expression of patriarchy. Though World War I was no exception, the ways in which combatants reassembled gender designations to successfully wage it were exceptional. Nations drew upon earlier conceptions of separate sexual domestic spheres, with women responsible for the health and productivity of the 6 Joanna Bourke, "Effeminacy, Ethnicity and the End of Trauma: The Sufferings of 'Shell-shocked' Men in Great Britain and Ireland, 1914-39," Journal of Contemporary History vol. 35, no. 1 (2000): 59. 7 Ibid., 58. 8 Ibid., 57. 6 household and men responsible for its strength and defense. Compelled by the military and economic necessities of total warfare, they expanded the concept of the home to the nation and committed their men and women accordingly to new, but similar, sexual responsibilities. At war, men fought and women worked. Françoise Thébaud notes that, during "the Great War," "Gender . . . emerge[d] as an organizing principle of wartime policy, . . . a veritable weapon of war. . . ." but, like any weapon of war, this sexual arrangement was not intended for peacetime.9 Even during the so-called emancipating years of wartime, women's subjugation was never far from view. Economically, women were still paid far less than men. In Italy, women earned a third of what their male countrymen did, and in Germany, lacking workplace protections, women worked longer hours for less pay.10 Even women's historical advances into the military were of questionable benefit. Women in the military—serving in the British Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC), the Russian "Women's Death Battalion," the Serbian army, and, eventually, in French military-related posts—often faced suspicious, even outraged, societies. They were criticized, as Thébaud notes, of "denying their sex by 'aping' men in a tasteless parody," and suspected of "immoral if not homosexual proclivities."11 In fact, the Russian Women's Death Battalion's acknowledged military function was to shame deserting men. Whether working at the front or at home, women, Cooper notes, "were exhorted never to forget their primary obligation—the replacement of the population, even if it might mean bearing a child out of wedlock or . . . from rape."12 Whether working at the front or at home, despite their advances, women essentially remained subordinate to men during and after the war. Europeans envisioned the post-war peace as a "return to normalcy." For women this meant relinquishing their jobs to men and resuming their domestic roles. As veterans returned 9 Thébaud, 24. Cooper, 445. 11 Thébaud, 34. 12 Cooper, 441. 10 7 from the front seeking employment, they quickly displaced female workers. Some unfortunate women became targets of veterans' violence. Post-war nations urged women to return to their homes and have more children. In pro-natalist France, the French government declared forms of contraception illegal, outlawed abortions, and incentivized families to reproduce in greater numbers. Similar movements arose in other former-warring nations as they all grimly assessed their populations' massive reductions. Outnumbered, pacifist feminists nonetheless vocally identified pro-natalist policies as a threat to women and peace, and, as Swedish activist Ellen Key warned, women must "resolutely resist mass production of children" for future military ends.13 All across post-war Europe, societies worked feverishly to impose conventional gender norms, restore their populations, and promote an image of traditional womanhood. Europeans during World War I and its immediate aftermath employed various competing female symbols. In addition to women as mothers to their nations, women at war were also glorified as nurses to war-ravaged men. Additionally, feminist and English professor Jane Marcus notes, "Like a company of Wagnerian Valkyries . . . the ambulance drivers resembled Amazon goddesses, carrying slain soldiers from the battlefield to glory in Valhalla or to hospitals where they could recover to fight again. . . ."14 The goddess Victory was also regularly portrayed in recruitment posters. But, after years of conventional female symbols, the 1920s saw the rise of the symbolic "New Woman." Primarily a cosmopolitan phenomenon among urban women, the flapper trend, depicted in magazines and movies, both thrilled and concerned societies. The short-haired outspoken young woman who smoked cigarettes and fornicated freely was one more worrisome change brought on by war. Exploiting their war-torn nations' weariness of social flux and perceived disorder, ultranationalist politicians like Adolf Hitler in Germany and Benito 13 Ellen Key, qtd. in Cooper, 446. 14 Jane Marcus, "Corpus/Corps/Corpse: Writing the Body in/at War," Afterword in Not So Quiet . . . Stepdaughters of War, by Helen Zenna Smith (1930; repr., New York: The Feminist Press, 1989), 244. 8 Mussolini in Italy used this symbolic New Woman to stoke fear and anger towards Western culture and to promote their own anti-democratic agendas. The years between the first and second World Wars saw some political advancements but more setbacks for women. World War I also compelled the destruction of the German Reich, the Austro-Hungarian Hapsburg Empire, the Russian Romanov Dynasty, and the Ottoman Empire. Tellingly, the decision to grant women suffrage in the postwar states was not made along Alliance-Entente lines. Interwar European nations that passed women's suffrage measures included: Scandinavia, Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Germany, England, and the Soviet Union. Elsewhere in Europe, in France, Italy, Belgium, and Switzerland, men continued to deny women political rights. While some may rightly argue that some suffrage granted is some progress made, others may credit these granted political rights to political necessity. Made anxious by the Soviet Revolution, western capitalist nations tapped a previously unrealized source of conservative votes to help defend against the spread of communism: women. As with any issue of historical complexity, historians continue to debate the myriad causes, effects, and meanings of postwar European women's suffrage. But historians all agree that World War I cost more human lives than any war before it. Statistics vary, but the total number killed in action lies at around ten million. An additional twenty million veterans returned home disabled, and nine million more returned "seriously disabled."15 The nations that mobilized their young came to refer to the survivors as the "Lost Generation." Many men and women, disillusioned by the war, likewise grew disillusioned with the cultures that waged it. Men, for whom the war had effectively destroyed all other realities, and women, for many of whom it created newly expanded ones, recognized that return to pre 15 Mona Siegel, "Did World War I Emancipate Women (and Emasculate Men)?," lecture, CSUS, Sacramento, CA, October 25, 2012. 9 war normalcy was impossible and even undesirable. The question of whether or not World War I emancipated women and emasculated men is an open-ended one. Numerous examples illustrated both these phenomena. War-ravaged men likely felt their manhood crushed beneath the behemoth of industrial warfare, and competent working women likely felt somewhat freed by sustaining their national-industrial war machines. But this sexual juxtaposition was a necessity of war, one of many wartime trends Europeans would rather forget. Post-war nations sought a prewar reality, one which rebuilt the conventional social order. In Europe's interwar period, societies largely restored the size and scope of men and women's traditional spheres, and a new emphasis on women's reproduction took hold. Though presciently warned by pacifist feminists, Europe, composed of nations harboring deeper animosities, deadlier weaponry, and more extreme nationalism, propelled itself towards an even more destructive war. The "war to end all wars" was only modern warfare's illustrious beginning. 10 BIBLIOGRAPHY Bourke, Joanna. "Effeminacy, Ethnicity and the End of Trauma: the Sufferings of 'Shell-shocked' Men in Great Britain and Ireland, 1914-39." Journal of Contemporary History 35, no. 1 (2000): 57-69. Cooper, Sandi E. "Women in War and Peace." In Becoming Visible: Women in European History. Edited by Renate Bridenthal, et al., 439-460. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1998. Marcus, Jane. "Corpus/Corps/Corpse: Writing the Body in/at War." Afterword in Not So Quiet . . . Stepdaughters of War, by Helen Zenna Smith. 1930. Reprint, New York: Feminist Press, 1989. Siegel, Mona. "Did World War I Emancipate Women (and Emasculate Men)?" Class Lecture. CSUS. Sacramento, California. October 25, 2012. Smith, Helen Zenna. Not So Quiet . . . Stepdaughters of War. 1930. Reprint, New York: Feminist Press, 1989. Thébaud, Françoise. "The Great War and the Triumph of Sexual Division." In A History of Women in the West. Volume V, edited by Françoise Thébaud. 21-75. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1994. 11