Article ID: CBB250376474

“Homes away from Home” and “Happy Prisoners”: Disabled Veterans, Space, and Masculinity in Britain, 1944–19501 (2020)

unapi

This article examines the changing nature of home for disabled ex-servicemen in the Second World War. It explores the function of institutional and domestic space in the restoration of traditional male roles. Masculine activities were encouraged in the long-stay institution, as men attempted to overcome their disability and be found suitable to resume a place in a traditional domestic home. Owing to war damage, finding housing was particularly challenging for disabled men, but a combination of the influence of the British Legion, donations from the public, and their preference to memorialize the war through the building of homes increased the possibility of living in a traditional domestic space. The building, alteration, and occupation of homes reinforced certain modes of behavior and expectations of disabled veterans, cementing the central, traditional role of men in postwar Britain. Importantly, freedom from institutional living came through traditional relationships with women and the production of children. This analysis of the home in its many configurations offers insight into disabled ex-servicemen, demonstrating that the institutional and domestic spaces that constitute home are as important in understanding masculinity as other traditionally gendered spaces such as the workplace.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB250376474/

Similar Citations

Article Adam Luptak; John Paul Newman; (2020)
Victory, Defeat, Gender, and Disability: Blind War Veterans in Interwar Czechoslovakia (/isis/citation/CBB325265833/)

Book Sarah Handley- Cousins; (2019)
Bodies in blue: Disability in the Civil War north (/isis/citation/CBB413192195/)

Thesis Gagen, Wendy Jane; (2004)
Disabling Masculinity: Ex-Servicemen, Disability and Gender Identity, 1914--1930 (/isis/citation/CBB001560534/)

Article Lee K Pennington; (2020)
Wives for the Wounded: Marriage Mediation for Japanese Disabled Veterans during World War II (/isis/citation/CBB743684093/)

Article Martina Salvante; (2020)
The Wounded Male Body: Masculinity and Disability in Wartime and Post-WWI Italy (/isis/citation/CBB154863836/)

Book Heather Ellis; (2017)
Masculinity and Science in Britain, 1831–1918 (/isis/citation/CBB803359283/)

Book Christophe Capuano; (2021)
Le Maintien à domicile: Une histoire transversale (/isis/citation/CBB945994623/)

Book Larry M. Logue; Peter Blanck; (2018)
Heavy Laden: Union Veterans, Psychological Illness, and Suicide (/isis/citation/CBB785969372/)

Book Suzannah Biernoff; (2017)
Portraits of Violence: War and the Aesthetics of Disfigurement (/isis/citation/CBB626555795/)

Book Meghan Fitzpatrick; (2017)
Invisible Scars: Mental Trauma and the Korean War (/isis/citation/CBB810752603/)

Authors & Contributors
Christophe Capuano
Martina Salvante
Fitzpatrick, K. Meghan
Edward Armston-Sheret
Sarah Handley-Cousins
Ellis, Heather
Journals
Journal of Social History
Social History of Medicine
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
Journal of Historical Geography
Gender and History
Publishers
Palgrave Macmillan
The University of Georgia Press
Helion & Company
University of Essex (United Kingdom)
University of Michigan Press
UBC Press
Concepts
Disabilities; disability; accessibility
Medicine and the military; medicine in war
Masculinity
Veterans
World War I
Psychiatry
People
Harold Gillies
Hurst, Arthur
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
20th century, late
Places
Great Britain
United States
Commonwealth countries
Antarctica
Manchester (England)
Czechoslovakia
Institutions
British Association for the Advancement of Science
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment