Women on the Front Line

Regular price €25.99
A01=Kathleen Sherit
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Feminist Criticism
History
Language_English
Military History
Military History of Strategy
Military History of World War II
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War & Defence Operations
Women in History
Women's Studies
World War Two
WWII

Product details

  • ISBN 9781445696843
  • Weight: 529g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2020
  • Publisher: Amberley Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Women on the Front Line explains how women went from unacknowledged participation in combat in the Second World War to the opening of all combat roles by 2018. It explores why regular service was offered after the war; the struggle to establish careers; the first crack in the non-combatant principle - the late 1970s decision to train servicewomen in the use of small arms; why the Royal Navy was the first to open its main combat role (seagoing in warships) to women in 1990; and the consequences for the RAF and the Army. The non-combatant principle governed the number of women that could be recruited, roles they could be trained for, postings, promotion chances, pay and pensions. Being non-combatant also affected women’s status in the eyes of servicemen as they could not fulfil the complete range of duties that fell to men. But women’s careers were not only blighted by the principle that they were non-combatants. The second major obstacle was the treatment of married women and those who became pregnant. This book brings out the growing gulf between employment rights and armed forces’ policies. The armed forces’ assertion that they had a right to be different from society began to crumble. This made a crucial difference to servicewomen who acquired the opportunity to continue with their careers if they chose. Confronting policies on women’s employment led to recognition of wider issues such as treatment of ethnic minorities, bullying and sexuality.
Kathleen Sherit had a twenty-two-year career in the Royal Air Force. She has delivered talks on women’s military participation at The National Museum of the Royal Navy, the National Army Museum and the RAF Museum. She has also been published by the Royal Air Force Historical Society, the British Journal for Military History and in Despatches, the Imperial War Museum’s magazine for its Friends’ Association.