Women,
Nazis and Universities: Female University Students in the
Third Reich, 1933-1945
Greenwood Press, Westport (Connecticut),1984
"Based on official government documents and extensive
secondary literature, this book revises several old assumptions
on the periods of peace and war. For the 1930s, Pauwels demonstrates
that declining female university enrollments were caused neither
by Nazi rhetoric nor antifeminist campaigns but by the drastic
drop in university-age population and the Depression. Despite
their alleged egalitarianism, Nazi social and economic policies
favored the access of middle- and upper-class women to higher
education. The Third Reich was unsuccessful in creating an
auxiliary female vanguard to serve in its leadership or welfare
programs and failed to stop women from flocking into law,
medicine, and engineering. It was WWII, not Nazism, that gave
German women a dramatic improvement in higher education; increased
numbers of women for a short time achieved unprecedented freedom
and prefessional advancement though at war's end, these dramatic
gains were lost. Extensive charts, notes, and bibliography
enhance a well-written concise monograph."
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