American Women in World War II

1740 Words4 Pages

At the start of World War II the American people had a sense of unity. Men chose to leave their jobs and families to join the front line, while women, for the first time, were leaving the home and taking over those jobs that their husbands left behind. In 1943, many magazines chose to paint a picture of women hard at work. These articles focused their stories on working women, and glamorized the untraditional jobs they held. They thought perhaps, that if they made these smaller, hard working jobs exciting, and noble, that more women would begin to join the work force. For this reason, the media created a fake working woman named Rosie the Riveter, and she was illustrated as a hero for American women. These efforts to pull women into working through magazines worked, more than six million women joined the workforce during war. Therefore, magazines helped to paint a picture of the average women taking a hard working wartime job, and at the same time advertised for other women to do the same. Magazines in 1943 provided articles of women hard at work during war. They were also written as an attempt to pull in other women to work, and help with the wartime efforts. In the scholarly article Rosie the Riveter Remembers, they touched base on these wartime women workers, and interviewed some of the women that had worked as “Rosies”. The article explained that during the war the media, as well as the government both set in motion a movement to help inspire women to back the war effort by taking a war job. The same women that at the time of the Great Depression were advised that they should not seize jobs from men. However, over 6 million women had entered the work force for the first time by the end of World War II. To stre... ... middle of paper ... ...apers of the time encouraging women to work, over 6 million women joined the workforce and helped to bring our countries men home safely. Works Cited "From Alice. to Eddie. to Adolf!" Life, March 15, 1943, 67Google Books. "Girl Pilots." Life, July 19, 1943, 73-81Google Books. “I Looked Into My Brother's Face." Good Housekeeping, September 1943. , 145 Kaufman, Pat. "Rosie the Riveter Remembers." Organization of American Historians 16 (2002): 22-29. Khalid, Areeba B. Albalagh. 2002. http://www.albalagh.net/women/0064.shtml. "Life Visits the Harvesters of America." Life, September 27, 1943, 119-22Google Books. Litoff, Judy B., and David C. Smith. "American Women in a World at War." Organization of American Historians 16, no. 3 (2002): 7-12. "Women in Steel They are Handling Tough Jobs in Heavy Industry." Life, August 9, 1943, 75-81Google Books.

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