Women in German society, 1930-1940
dc.contributor.author
Stephenson, Ann Jill Russell
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-01-31T11:38:13Z
dc.date.available
2018-01-31T11:38:13Z
dc.date.issued
1974
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
The aim of this thesis is to describe and discuss some aspects
of the status of, and opportunities for, women in Germany in the
years between the impact on Germany of the world economic crisis,
which followed on the Wall Street crash in October 1929, and the
early years of the Second World War, when the German army was still
victorious and the Nazi regime was attempting to wage war with
only a partial war economy. The significance of the year 1933,
with the Nazi takeover of power, in this decade is inescapable; but
it is increasingly clear that many of the political, economic and
social policies pursued by the Nazis when in Government were
pre -figured in developments conceived and even set in train in the last
years of the Weimar Republic, often as a direct result of the
depression and its effects. The most serious of these, the massive
unemployment in Germany in the early 1930s, did much to condition
attitudes to the position of women, particularly with regard to their
employment - in manual and professional occupations alike - outside
the home. Nazi ideology indeed affected policies concerning women,
but it was conveniently in tune with the needs and the mood of the
time; thus, for a short time Nazi ideology seemed to have practical
application, in providing justification for the provision of jobs for men at the expense of women. This situation rapidly changed, as full
employment was achieved, and a shortage of labour became Germany's
problem in the later 1930s, particularly once war broke out in
September 1939. Then, a conflict developed between the Party
ideologues and the men in charge of day-to-day Government, a conflict
which was resolved in favour of the former in 1941, no doubt partly
because women were reluctant to provide the labour which was badly
needed.
en
dc.description.abstract
The depression, Nazi ideology, and the build -up to a partial
war economy affected policies towards women not only in employment
of all kinds but also in the realm of higher education. The broad
categories into which this work falls therefore include higher
education and senior schooling, as well as employment outside the
home and, particularly, the professions. Since attitudes in these
areas were partly conditioned by, and partly conditioned, attitudes
towards the position of women in the family, particularly as child - bearers, some discussion of marriage and morals is included. The
part played by the women's organisations in the Imperial and
Republican periods necessitates some brief discussion of them, while
the Nazis' attempt to organise German women - with a marked lack of
success - must also be considered. Naturally, many omissions remain;
this work cannot claim to be a comprehensive social history of
women in the 1930s.
en
dc.description.abstract
The points which are of most general interest here are the
continuity of policy from about 1930 to 1935/36, in spite of - or
perhaps because of - the assumption of power by the Nazis, the
failure of the Nazis to institute a fully totalitarian regime largely
because of their dependence on positive support from the people, and
the conflict between Party and State. With regard particularly to
women, it is clear that while equality of rights and equality of
opportunity were not achieved in the Weimar years, enough progress
was made in securing a place for women in employment generally, in
the professions and in higher education, for attempts at discrimination
against them - before as well as after 1933 - to fail to have
significant effect. The net result of the 1930s was, in fact, to
consolidate their position in these areas, once the Nazis' immediate
political and foreign ambitions necessitated an increase in personnel
in them in the later 1930s. This was in spite of the Nazis'
overwhelming obsession with the birth rate, which led at first to
attempts to remove women from activity outside the home, and then to
preoccupation with providing for the welfare of employed women. Connected with this, the 1930s also witnessed a reversal of the postwar tendency to underestimate the contribution to the life of the
nation of the full -time housewife and mother. For "Aryan ", "politically
reliable" German women, then, the Nazi regime brought some benefit,
and the disadvantages experienced by women were very often those
which men, too, suffered. But benefit and disadvantage alike were
conditioned not by the needs or desires of individual Germans or of
groups of Germans; the needs of the State, as interpreted by the
Nazi Party, and particularly by Hitler, had primacy in every area
of policy.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/27463
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2017 Block 16
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
Women in German society, 1930-1940
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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