Gender, Civil War and National Identity: Women Partisans during the Greek Civil War, 1946–1949
Title | Gender, Civil War and National Identity: Women Partisans during the Greek Civil War, 1946–1949 |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2000 |
Authors | Poulos, Margaret |
Journal | Australian Journal of Politics and History |
Volume | 46 |
Issue | 3 |
Pagination | 418-427 |
Date Published | 9/2000 |
Abstract | This paper focuses on the recovery of the experience of partisan women who fought in the lines of the communist-led Greek Democratic Army (GDA) during the Greek Civil War (1946–1949). More specifically this work employs the image of the Greek woman warrior as an analytical category to investigate the relationship between militarism, nationalism and Greek feminist politics in relation to key nation-building conflicts of the modern Greek period. As such it belongs to the realm of scholarship informed by an understanding of ‘gender’ and ‘nation’ as constructed and contested relational systems of cultural and social meanings. Together the two systems not only shape the political culture in historically specific ways but also legitimate and limit the access of (groups of) people — women as well as men — to national movements as well as to the resources of the nation-state. This paper concentrates specifically on the heavily mythologised women of the GDA. It pays special attention to the historical association of their rebellion with national citizenship rights in post-war Greece. |
URL | https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-8497.00106 |
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