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  1. Natalia Bode, Olga Ignatovich, Olga Lander, Elizaveta Mikulina, Galina Sanko were among the latter and each of them took unique pictures of World War II, seen with their own eyes and revealing...

  2. In response to the high casualties suffered by male soldiers, Stalin allowed planning which would replace men with women in second lines of defense, such as anti-aircraft guns and medical aid. These provided gateways through which women could gradually become involved in combat.

  3. World War II recalibrated the way that Russian women looked and dressed. Many wore military uniform or worked in factories in the rear. Victory on May 9, 1945, provided a long-awaited reason to...

  4. 30 lis 2021 · In March 1942, when the People’s Commissariat of Defense began enlisting women to replace male casualties in some combat roles, Soviet propaganda began honoring individual war heroines. The USSR utilized propaganda celebrating heroic servicewomen to recruit more female soldiers.

  5. Soviet Women in Combat explores the unprecedented historical pheno-menon of Soviet young women’s en masse volunteering for World War II combat in 1941 and writes it into the twentieth-century history of women, war, and violence.

  6. 5 kwi 2022 · The Soviet female soldier has been portrayed worldwide as a symbol of women’s emancipation in virtue of socialist ideas. In practice, Soviet traditional values did not experiment such evolution. The discourse about women’s contribution to war rapidly changed in the face of the victory.

  7. 25 lip 2017 · During World War II the world was witness to a women’s phenomenon. Women served in all branches of the military in many countries of the world: 225,000 in the British army, 450,000 to 500,000 in the American, 500,000 in the German …. About a million women fought in the Soviet army.

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