Description

Book Synopsis
The romanticized image of the heroic male resistance fighter in World War II belies a truth that is both darker and more personal. This literary history explores, for the first time, the reality of European women’s roles in fighting Nazism. By comparing the resistance literature of French and German authors—both famous and more obscure—this innovative book links the traditional gender expectations for women and the conventions of their everyday lives with their unique forms of resistance. Theirs was an opposition grounded in the ordinary, beyond the sphere of political violence. Women were long regarded as outsiders to combat and politics, with no stake in upholding resistance myths. Women authors therefore freely rendered the personal and moral landscape of the resister’s world in a new vocabulary. They revised standard rhetoric and replaced heroism and bullets with the values of home, human relationships, and candid acknowledgement of the sorrow, fear, and uncertainty of war. A groundbreaking study for students of European history, women’s studies, peace studies, or comparative literature, this volume is also accessible to a general audience interested in the role of women in World War II.

Trade Review
”…interessanten und ertragreichen Untersuchung…” in: Germanistik, Band 45, Heft 3/4, 2004, p. 897

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter One A Resistance Discourse Fashioned from War’s Chaos Chapter Two Chipping Away at the State: German Women and Resistance Chapter Three A Legacy of Activism: French Women and Resistance Chapter Four NEIN: Ordinary Actions, Everyday Settings Chapter Five Conventional Women and Revolutionary Movements Chapter Six ‘They Stood Like a Wall’: Resistance As Collective Protest Chapter Seven The Tender Liaison Agent: Femininity As Disguise Chapter Eight Clandestine Activity at Home: Resistance and Relationship Chapter Nine Bonds of Communion: The Emotional Context of Resistance Conclusion Bibliography Index

‘This Anguish, Like a Kind of Intimate Song’: Resistance in Women’s Literature of World War II

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    A Paperback by L. Leigh Westerfield

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      View other formats and editions of ‘This Anguish, Like a Kind of Intimate Song’: Resistance in Women’s Literature of World War II by L. Leigh Westerfield

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 01/01/2004
      ISBN13: 9789042011489, 978-9042011489
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The romanticized image of the heroic male resistance fighter in World War II belies a truth that is both darker and more personal. This literary history explores, for the first time, the reality of European women’s roles in fighting Nazism. By comparing the resistance literature of French and German authors—both famous and more obscure—this innovative book links the traditional gender expectations for women and the conventions of their everyday lives with their unique forms of resistance. Theirs was an opposition grounded in the ordinary, beyond the sphere of political violence. Women were long regarded as outsiders to combat and politics, with no stake in upholding resistance myths. Women authors therefore freely rendered the personal and moral landscape of the resister’s world in a new vocabulary. They revised standard rhetoric and replaced heroism and bullets with the values of home, human relationships, and candid acknowledgement of the sorrow, fear, and uncertainty of war. A groundbreaking study for students of European history, women’s studies, peace studies, or comparative literature, this volume is also accessible to a general audience interested in the role of women in World War II.

      Trade Review
      ”…interessanten und ertragreichen Untersuchung…” in: Germanistik, Band 45, Heft 3/4, 2004, p. 897

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter One A Resistance Discourse Fashioned from War’s Chaos Chapter Two Chipping Away at the State: German Women and Resistance Chapter Three A Legacy of Activism: French Women and Resistance Chapter Four NEIN: Ordinary Actions, Everyday Settings Chapter Five Conventional Women and Revolutionary Movements Chapter Six ‘They Stood Like a Wall’: Resistance As Collective Protest Chapter Seven The Tender Liaison Agent: Femininity As Disguise Chapter Eight Clandestine Activity at Home: Resistance and Relationship Chapter Nine Bonds of Communion: The Emotional Context of Resistance Conclusion Bibliography Index

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