Angela K. Smith
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Domestic survival strategies
The Serbian retreat, 1915
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Those women, who did not remain behind with the wounded, were forced to flee along with the defeated Serbian armies and thousands of Serbian refugees. Their path took them across the mountains of Serbia, Montenegro and Albania just as the winter set in, with the noise of the guns always behind them. This was an extraordinary journey and some fascinating accounts of it survive. This chapter explores the experience of the retreat from a gendered perspective, with a particular focus on the ways in which the women involved used their ‘femininity’ to survive and to help others to get through. It examines the everyday, the ordinary, the domestic, and the ways in which women used these aspects of life as a survival mechanism peculiar to their own gendered experience. This chapter focuses on the charismatic leader, Mabel St Clair Stobart, drawing on her autobiographical writings, analyzing her conscious self-presentation, and the ways in which she choose to perform the roles of Commandant, Major, Lady and Mother simultaneously. The chapter builds on the ideas in 'Role Call' and considers the significance of gender in the way women chose to deal with the experience of the retreat.

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British women of the Eastern Front

War, writing and experience in Serbia and Russia, 1914–20

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