Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

Women, Social Leadership, and the Second World War : Continuities of Class, Hardback Book

Women, Social Leadership, and the Second World War : Continuities of Class Hardback

Hardback

Description

The associational life of middle-class women in twentieth-century England has been largely ignored by historians.

During the Second World War women's clubs, guilds, and institutes provided a basis for the mobilization of up to a million women, mainly housewives, into unpaid part-time work.

Women's Voluntary Service, which was set up by the Government in 1938 to organize this work, generated a rich archive of reports and correspondence which provide the social historian with a unique window into the female public sphere. Questioning the view that the Second World War served to democratize English society, James Hinton shows how the war enabled middle-class social leaders to reinforce their claims to authority.

Displaying 'character' through their voluntary work, the leisured women at the centre of this study made themselves indispensable to the war effort.

James Hinton delineates these 'continuities of class', reconstructing intimate portraits of local female social leadership in contrasting settings across provincial England (towns large and small, shire counties, the Durham coalfield), tracing complex and often acerbic rivalries within the voluntary sector, and uncovering gulfs of mutual distrust and incomprehension dividing publicly active women along gendered frontiers of class and party. This study reminds us how much Britain's wartime mobilization relied on a Victorian ethos of public service to cope with the profoundly un-Victorian problems of total war.

The women's associations so evocatively explored here reached the apex of their effectiveness during the Second World War, sustaining an uneasy balance between voluntarism and the expanding power of the state.

In the longer term female social leaders found themselves marginalized by bureaucracy and professionalization.

The stories told here demonstrate that the Second World War changed English society far less than is often assumed.

It was not until the 1950s and 1960s that practices and attitudes laid down in the nineteenth century finally lost their purchase.

Information

£160.00

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information