Tożsamość płciowa w narracjach żołnierek Armii Czerwonej, uczestniczek II wojny światowej

Grażyna Mendecka
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Abstract

Gender Identity in the Narrative of Women-Soldiers Serving in the Red Army during World War II The analysis of gender identity is based on the narratives of women who volunteered to serve in the military after the start of World War II and fought as soldiers in the Red Army. Forty years after World War II, Svetlana Alexievich conducted interviews with women veterans, which she published in the book War’s Unwomanly Face. Their memories of wartime and post-war period were analyzed from the perspective of their gender identity, i.e. the ability to reconcile the role of a woman determined by their biological sex with the role of a soldier determined by the circumstances. The interpretation of this problem offered in the paper is based on developmental psychology theories of Erik Erikson, James Marcia, Daniel Levinson, and Jeffrey Arnett, and the sociological perspective on identity. Selected narratives from Alexievich’s reportages are analyzed focusing on identification and interpretation of different themes, which are assessed according to their relevance to the understanding of the process described. The narrators were only 16–20 years old at the time of joining the military and they were still at the stage of identity moratorium. It required a lot of determination for them to become a soldier. Their identity as a soldier was their assumed identity, defined by Marcia as ideological or professional engagement without completing the period of exploration. Women were not welcome in the army, they suffered because of logistical shortcomings, but they still supported all of the units, became officers and military leaders, and were awarded medals for their valor, courage and reliability. After the war, they were socially rejected and condemned and they needed to process their identity, i.e. reject their military ethos in order to strengthen their sense of being a women. Based on Arnett’s concept one can conclude that their “in between”period of identity exploration was determined by external events and social relations.
性别认同的分析是基于二战开始后自愿参军并在红军中作战的女性的叙述。第二次世界大战结束40年后,斯维特拉娜·阿列克谢耶维奇采访了一些女性退伍军人,并将其发表在《战争的非女性面孔》一书中。从性别认同的角度,即调和生理性别决定的女性角色与环境决定的军人角色的能力,分析了他们战时和战后时期的记忆。本文对这一问题的解释基于Erik Erikson、James Marcia、Daniel Levinson和Jeffrey Arnett的发展心理学理论,以及认同的社会学视角。从阿列克谢耶维奇的报告文学中选择叙事进行分析,重点是对不同主题的识别和解释,根据它们对所描述过程的理解的相关性进行评估。叙述者参军时只有16-20岁,还处于身份暂缓阶段。他们要当兵需要很大的决心。他们作为士兵的身份是他们假定的身份,玛西娅将其定义为没有完成探索期的意识形态或职业参与。妇女在军队中不受欢迎,她们因后勤不足而受苦,但她们仍然支持所有单位,成为军官和军事领导人,并因其英勇、勇气和可靠而获得奖章。战争结束后,她们受到社会的排斥和谴责,她们需要处理自己的身份,即拒绝她们的军事精神,以加强她们作为女性的意识。根据阿内特的概念,我们可以得出结论,他们的“中间”时期的身份探索是由外部事件和社会关系决定的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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