Women of the Far Right: The Mothers' Movement and World War II

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University of Chicago Press, 1996 - 264 էջ
The majority of American women supported the Allied cause during World War II. and made sacrifices on the home front to benefit the war effort. But U.S. intervention was opposed by a movement led by ultraright women whose professed desire to keep their sons out of combat was mixed with militant Christianity, anticommunism, and anti-Semitism. This book is the first history of the self-styled "mothers' movement," so called because among its component groups were the National Legion of Mothers of America, the Mothers of Sons Forum, and the National Blue Star Mothers.

Unlike leftist antiwar movements, the mothers' movement was not pacifist; its members opposed the war on Germany because they regarded Hitler as an ally against the spread of atheistic communism. They also differed from leftist women in their endorsement of patriarchy and nationalism. God, they believed, wanted them to fight the New Deal liberalism that imperiled their values and the internationalists, communists, and Jews, whom they saw as subjugating Christian America.

Jeansonne examines the motivations of these women, the political and social impact of their movement, and their collaborations with men of the far right and also with mainstream isolationists such as Charles Lindbergh. Drawing on files kept by the FBI and other confidential documents, this book sheds light on the history of the war era and on women's place within the far right.
 

Բովանդակություն

The Context of the World War II Mothers Movement
1
Elizabeth Dilling and the Genesis of a Movement
10
The Fifth Column
29
FOUR
45
Cathrine Curtis and the Womens National Committee to Keep
57
Dilling and the Crusade against LendLease
73
NINE
111
ELEVEN
139
TWELVE
158
THIRTEEN
179
EPILOGUE
187
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Էջ xxii - Feminism is a critique of male supremacy, formed and offered in the light of a will to change it, which in turn assumes a conviction that it is changeable.

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