Friday, February 8, 2019
The Impact of Nazi Policies on the Position and Role of Women in German
The Impact of Nazi Policies on the  specify and Role of Women in Germany, 1933-39   The Nazi regime aimed to utilize the family for its own needs. Women   were compel to marry and  bind children, instead of having their own   personal decisions. The functions of the family were reduced to the    adept task of reproduction. They aimed to break the family, and to   place it as a breeding and  rise up institution completely in the   service of the totalitarian state.   The main  accusing of Hitler and the Nazis was to increase population   to help with Volksgemeinschaft. Germany had a declining birth rate,   so they precious to promote  lavishlyer birth rates among the Aryan race.   This was a nonher  divulge element of the policies adopted. Women were   encouraged to have as many children as possible,  save this was not   acceptable with undesirables  ilk Jews and Black people, only   Aryans. The policies used like financial incentives-marriage loans   and birth grants, meant that wome   n were placed better when having   children. Their role was to maintain high birth rates, and their   position and situation was desirable for this role. However all women   did not accept this and many did not  turn a profit from the measures taken.   Underpinned in the  polity was the  position that it would restrict women to   the home and reduce employment with women, which is what the Nazis   wanted. However this was not the  grounds as there was actually a growth   in  womanish employment from 1933-39. This was very ironic, the Nazis set   out their policies for women to be able to gain from them in having   children, however by having less children and getting jobs, women   still gained as employment levels rose. Not all...  ... for with Nazi   beliefs, but were actually disagreeing with the traditional, rural   beliefs.   From this a mixed picture emerges, some women gained as a result of   the  individualised and individualised nature of the evidence. Even   though the Nazi    theory and policy were clear, there were significant   contradictions and conflicting issues in practise. The roles issued to   women were self-undermining and had logistical inconsistencies, for   example, they could not have all the men out fighting and women home,   who runs factories etc? These contradictions show some of the  badinage of   Nazism. Some women felt  more valued and appreciate and felt more   stable, whereas others were sterilised, outlawed, and divorced on   spurious grounds. The role and position of women varied  in the midst of   different groups because of the impact of Nazi Policies.                  
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