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Informationen zum Autor Nancy M. Wingfield is Associate Professor of History at Northern Illinois University. She is co-author of Return to Diversity: A Political History of East Central Europe since World War II and co-editor (with Maria Bucur) of Staging the Past: The Politics of Commemoration in Habsburg Central Europe, 1848 to the Present. Maria Bucur is John W. Hill Associate Professor of History at Indiana University and author of Eugenics and Modernization in Interwar Romania. Klappentext Integrates gender into the broader narrative of the world wars in eastern Europe Zusammenfassung Explores the role of gender on both the home and fighting fronts in Eastern Europe during the First and Second World Wars. This book includes themes such as: the ways in which wartime experiences challenge traditional gender roles; post-war restoration of gender order; collaboration and resistance; the body; and memory and commemoration. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments 1. Introduction: Gender and War in Twentieth-Century Eastern EuropeNancy M. Wingfield and Maria Bucur Part I. Challenging Gender Roles/Restoring Order 2. "Female Generals" and "Siberian Angels": Aristocratic Nurses and the Austro-Hungarian POW ReliefAlon Rachamimov 3. Civilizing the Soldier in Postwar AustriaMaureen Healy 4. Between Red Army and White Guard: Women in Budapest, 1919Eliza Ablovatski Part II. Gendered Collaborating and Resisting 5. Dumplings and Domesticity: Women, Collaboration, and Resistance in the Protectorate of Bohemia and MoraviaMelissa Feinberg 6. Denouncers and Fraternizers: Gender, Collaboration, and Retribution in Bohemia and Moravia during World War II and AfterBenjamin Frommer 7. Family, Gender, and Ideology in World War II LatviaMara Lazda Part III. Remembering War: Gendered Bodies, Gendered Stories 8. Kosovo Maiden(s): Serbian Women Commemorate the Wars of National Liberation, 1912¿1918Melissa Bokovoy 9. Women's Stories as Sites of Memory: Gender and Remembering Romania's World WarsMaria Bucur 10. The Nation's Pain and Women's Shame: Polish Women and Wartime ViolenceKatherine R. Jolluck 11. "The Alienated Body": Gender Identity and the Memory of the Siege of LeningradLisa A. Kirschenbaum Select Bibliography Contributors Index ...