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Women on the Frontlines: Gender, Labor, and Politics in the Cold War Era MTA
Exploring women's roles in state ideology, workforce mobilization, and resistance movements
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Women on the Frontlines: Gender, Labor, and Politics in the Cold War Era *Women on the Frontlines: Gender, Labor, and Politics in the Cold War Era* examines the multifaceted roles of women as central actors rather than peripheral witnesses in the ideological struggle between capitalism and socialism. The book explores how both superpowers and non-aligned nations mobilized women’s labor, reproductive capacities, and intellectual contributions to bolster national strength and ideological legitimacy. By analyzing the "gender contracts" of the East and West—from the American domestic suburban ideal to the Soviet Union’s "double burden" of professional and domestic work—the text reveals how state policies simultaneously empowered and constrained women across the globe.

The narrative moves beyond the domestic sphere to highlight women's critical participation in high-stakes environments, including intelligence, cryptography, and the space race. It contrasts the symbolic inclusion of pioneers like Valentina Tereshkova with the systemic "glass ceilings" that persisted in both democratic and command economies. Furthermore, the book details women's leadership in resistance movements, ranging from the American Civil Rights struggle and anti-nuclear peace camps at Greenham Common to the fierce guerrilla warfare characterizing decolonization efforts in Asia, Africa, and Latin America.

Central to the book is the exploration of how women navigated and subverted state expectations through "quiet acts" of resistance. In the Eastern Bloc, this took the form of managing the complexities of shortage economies and the circulation of feminist *samizdat*, while in the West, second-wave feminism emerged to challenge the "feminine mystique" and systemic workplace discrimination. These movements bridged national borders, creating transnational feminist solidarities that prioritized issues like reproductive rights, economic justice, and peace, often in direct opposition to the militarized priorities of their respective governments.

The final chapters address the turbulent transition following the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The book argues that the arrival of market capitalism often brought new forms of precarity for women, as "shock therapy" dismantled social safety nets and traditionalist backlashes sought to re-domesticate the female workforce. Ultimately, the work serves as a feminist reassessment of the 20th century, illustrating how the gendered architectures established during the Cold War continue to shape contemporary global debates regarding labor, security, and human rights.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Women were active strategists and laborers on visible and invisible frontlines—from factories and classrooms to intelligence networks and resistance movements—shaping Cold War institutions while navigating state ideologies.
  • The book contrasts competing feminine ideals: the suburban housewife symbolizing capitalist prosperity in the U.S. versus the heroic worker-mother promoted by socialist states, revealing how both systems instrumentalized women's bodies for national projects.
  • State policies across blocs created a persistent 'double burden' where women balanced paid labor with unpaid domestic work, exacerbated by inconsistent social services and pronatalist agendas that prioritized state needs over individual autonomy.
  • Women's resistance took diverse forms—from quotidian acts of survival in queues and informal economies to organized dissent like samizdat publishing, anti-nuclear encampments, and transnational feminist networks challenging state control.
  • Through an intersectional lens, the text examines how race, class, ethnicity, religion, and sexuality structured women's experiences, highlighting Black women's labor in the U.S., migrant women in Soviet spaces, and Indigenous roles in liberation movements.
Who's It For:

This book is designed for upper-division undergraduate and graduate students, scholars, and researchers in women's and gender history, Cold War studies, and transnational politics. It will particularly benefit those seeking a deeply researched, intersectional analysis of how gender shaped labor, policy, and resistance across capitalist, socialist, and decolonizing contexts from the 1940s through the 1990s. Readers interested in the methodology of combining biography, policy analysis, and social history—using archives, oral histories, and visual culture—will find it a valuable model for understanding women's agency within structural constraints.

Author:

Kevin Payne

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 25, 2026

Word Count:

72,099 words

Reading Time:

5 hours 3 minutes

Sample:

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