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Housewives
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This chapter examines how housewives used ideas about female citizenship and their status in the ‘people’s war’ to argue for better treatment within civil defence. Volunteering for civil defence could have many benefits for married women, but it was complicated by the inflexibility and incompetence of civil defence organisers and the government, as well as the restrictions of home and family. The status of housewives as wives and mothers within the ‘people’s war’ gave them power. They could justify working fewer hours or even giving up the work because they had to put their family first, and they were able to resist the expectations of colleagues about how they should behave and the type of work they were best suited to perform. Finally, the chapter turns to informal volunteering within civil defence, including in the housewives’ service, which was the most successful of the neighbours’ civil defence associations established during the war. These groups were generally reliant on local enthusiasm and initiative and thus their success varied hugely, but at a national level the government once again proved incapable of fully appreciating the potential worth of housewives’ labour.

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Creating the people’s war

Civil defence communities in Second World War Britain

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