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5 - Women in Germany, 1925–1940. Family, welfare and work

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2010

Timothy W. Mason
Affiliation:
St Peter's College, Oxford
Jane Caplan
Affiliation:
Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania
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Summary

If we say the world of the man is the state, the world of the man is his commitment, his struggle on behalf of the community, we could then perhaps say that the world of the woman is a smaller world. For her world is her husband, her family, her children and her home. But where would the big world be if no-one wanted to look after the small world? How could the big world continue to exist, if there was no-one to make the task of caring for the small world the centre of their lives? No, the big world rests upon this small world! The big world cannot survive if the small world is not secure.

Adolf Hitler, speech to the National Socialist Women's organization, Nuremberg Party Rally, 8 September 1934

in the winter of 1939/40 the Nazi regime faced a major internal crisis. The mobilization of resources for war was inadequate in every respect; the German people, in particular the industrial working class, showed no enthusiasm for a war of aggression, no willingness to make further sacrifices in the interests of imperial expansion. Discontent and anxiety were apparent in all walks of life, and the conservative resistance to Nazi rule developed briefly into a serious political and military conspiracy. A large part of Poland had been conquered, but Britain and France were at war with Germany. In the armed forces and among the civilian population morale was low; rationing, blackouts, overtime, shortages of all kinds and the evacuation of people from frontier areas heightened the general sense of foreboding and insecurity.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1995

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