ABSTRACT

This lively collection of essays showcases recent research into the impact of the conflict on British women during the First World War and since.

Looking outside of the familiar representations of wartime women as nurses, munitionettes, and land girls, it introduces the reader to lesser-known aspects of women’s war experience, including female composers’ musical responses to the war, changes in the culture of women’s mourning dress, and the complex relationships between war, motherhood, and politics. Written during the war’s centenary, the chapters also consider the gendered nature of war memory in Britain, exploring the emotional legacies of the conflict today, and the place of women’s wartime stories on the contemporary stage.

The collection brings together work by emerging and established scholars contributing to the shared project of rewriting British women’s history of the First World War. It is an essential text for anyone researching or studying this history. This book was originally published as a special issue of Women’s History Review.

chapter 2|17 pages

The Carer, the Combatant and the Clandestine

Images of women in the First World War in War Illustrated magazine

chapter 4|14 pages

Antimilitarism, Citizenship and Motherhood

The formation and early years of the Women’s International League (WIL), 1915–1919

chapter 5|14 pages

‘Giddy Girls’, ‘Scandalous Statements’ and a ‘Burst Bubble’

The war babies panic of 1914–1915

chapter 6|16 pages

‘A Matter of Individual Opinion and Feeling’

The changing culture of mourning dress in the First World War

chapter 8|17 pages

‘My Husband is Interested in War Generally’

Gender, family history and the emotional legacies of total war

chapter 9|13 pages

115What the Women Did

Remembering or reducing women of the First World War on the contemporary British stage