The Hour of the Woman: Memories of Germany's "Crisis Years" and West German National Identity.
- E. Heineman
- 1 April 1996
History
Gender, Sexuality, and Coming to Terms with the Nazi Past
- E. Heineman
- 1 March 2005
History
In the years leading to the sixtieth anniversary of the end of the Second World War, popular books and films have sparked lively discussions about the ways Germans use gender and sexuality to…
Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones
- E. Heineman
- 31 January 2011
History, Political Science
Introduction: The History of Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones -Elizabeth D. Heineman I. SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN PEACE AND IN CONFLICT 1. Rape in the American Revolution: Process, Reaction, and Public…
Sexuality and Nazism: The Doubly Unspeakable?
- E. Heineman
- 1 January 2002
History, Political Science
TH E H I S T O R Y O F S E X U A L I T Y in Nazi Germany unites two subjects vulnerable to sensationalist coverage: sex and Nazism. Film scholars have observed a tendency to eroticize National…
Towards a History of Transnational Sex in World War II
- E. Heineman
- 11 September 2014
History
History
- E. Heineman
- 1 November 2009
History
What makes a a What defines a Jewish neighborhood? What determined the architectural form of Making of cookbooks, etiquette and photographs, this will analyze how Jews (in all their diversity) and…
Tara Zahra. The Lost Children: Reconstructing Europe's Families after World War II.
- E. Heineman
- 1 February 2013
History
Single Motherhood and Maternal Employment in Divided Germany: Ideology, Policy, and Social Pressures in the 1950s
- E. Heineman
- 1 October 2000
History, Political Science
It is argued that, despite their short-term failure to change women's mothering and labor force behavior via public policy, the German states strongly influenced the social pressures women faced by shaping the discursive environment.
Whose Mothers? Generational Difference, War, and the Nazi Cult of Motherhood
- E. Heineman
- 1 January 2001
History, Sociology
Two areas of propaganda and policy regarding women in wartime Nazi Germany are analyzed: women's contribution to the war economy and their mourning of men who fell at war are analyzed.
What Difference Does a Husband Make?: Women and Marital Status in Nazi and Postwar Germany
- E. Heineman
- 30 April 1999
History, Sociology
In October 1946, seven million more women than men lived in occupied Germany. In this study of unwed, divorced, widowed and married women at work and at home across three political regimes, the…
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