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Gender and French Identity after the Second World War, 1944-1954: Engendering Frenchness

Autor Visiting Assistant Professor Kelly Ricciardi Colvin
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mar 2019
The enfranchisement of women in Charles de Gaulle's France in 1944 is considered a potent element in the nation's self-crafted, triumphant World War Two narrative: the French, conquered by the Germans, valiantly resisted until they rescued themselves and built a new democracy, honoring France's longstanding liberal traditions. Kelly Ricciardi Colvin's Gender and French Identity after the Second World War, 1944-1954 calls that potent element into question. By analyzing a range of sources, including women's magazines, trials, memoirs, and spy novels, this book explores the ways in which culture was used to limit the power of the female vote. It exposes a wide network of constructed behavioral norms that supported a conservative vision of French identity. Taken together, they depicted men as virile Resistors for French democracy and history, and women as solely domestic support. Indeed Colvin shows that women's access to the vote emerged alongside an explosion of cultural messages that encouraged them to retreat into the home, to find mates, to have 'millions of beautiful babies', in the words of de Gaulle, and not to challenge patriarchy in any way. This is a vital study for understanding the nature of postwar France and women's history in 20th-century Europe.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781350105553
ISBN-10: 1350105554
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 6 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Incorporates detailed analysis of a range of primary sources, including women's magazines, memoirs, trials, and spy novels

Notă biografică

Kelly Ricciardi Colvin is Visiting Assistant Professor at Brown University, USA.

Cuprins

List of IllustrationsIntroduction: France Is Beginning Again 1. The Re-Victimization of France2. Women as Victims3. The War for Love4. Looks5. Disreputable Women 6. Women as Voters7. Conclusion: Le délugeBibliography

Recenzii

This book offers thought-provoking and compelling examples and should inspire further paths of research and methods into thinking about how culture stems from and reinforces patriarchal systems.
Colvin (Brown) shows that there remained a sizeable gap between enfranchisement's seeming promise of full citizenship and the social-political realities that continued to limit possible avenues for women and to prioritize their confinement in various ways in order to maintain a patriarchal vision of an idealized gender order. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.
Colvin draws from a wide array of narratives to demonstrate how the postwar natalist stance and the need to reestablish normalcy and stability fuelled cultural narratives that undercut women's relationship to power, at precisely the moment in which French women embarked on new political participation. Her work offers a valuable contribution to a more nuanced understanding of gender identity in postwar France.
Utilising a varied body of source material including women's magazines, Resistance press, trials, memoirs, and post-war media, [Colvin] highlights the gap between the promise of enfranchisement and social attitudes towards women's roles in newly-liberated France ... Represents an ambi-tious contribution to scholarship on the shifting social positioning of French women in the period immediately trailing the Liberation.