12018-12-01T16:35:21-08:00Josie Cotton85e536e9436ca7acf1cc79640b3de84b2753ceeb314743A 1943 British feature filmplain2018-12-01T16:53:22-08:00YouTube2016-04-15T19:44:58.000ZWbfixoCcwusJon jokovinoJosie Cotton85e536e9436ca7acf1cc79640b3de84b2753ceeb
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12018-12-01T16:43:13-08:00Josie Cotton85e536e9436ca7acf1cc79640b3de84b2753ceebJennifer at the beginning of the filmJosie Cotton6plain2019-03-06T18:09:16-08:00Josie Cotton85e536e9436ca7acf1cc79640b3de84b2753ceeb
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12020-02-15T06:09:03-08:00Sam Harveyd4c88ee35b1c49f1c9a8610709e97b4711dab3feSam HarveySam Harvey1plain2020-02-15T06:09:03-08:00Great Work I'm Also Looking forward to start my new architecture projectSam Harveyd4c88ee35b1c49f1c9a8610709e97b4711dab3fe
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12018-12-01T16:23:59-08:00“There’s Nothing to Be Afraid of in a Factory”: Gendered Depictions of Factory Work103plain2019-03-22T19:13:55-07:00When war erupted between Britain and Germany in September 1939, so did the need for increased production within the entire British Empire. But it was not until 1942 that the British and Australian governments took an active role in mobilizing women for war work. In both countries, thousands of women left their peacetime jobs as shop assistants, housemaids, and waitresses. They traded their aprons for overalls, their hairpins for bandanas. Many became factory workers, stepping into an unfamiliar world of clanging machinery and billowing smoke—though already known to those women who had worked in factories long before the war.
In wartime Britain and Australia, women worked, often alongside men, to meet the urgent need for production. They worked to make munitions, aircrafts, and gas masks—anything to support the Allied war effort. They learned how to operate heavy machinery and work on assembly lines, and, like their iconic American counterpart, how to rivet sheet metal.
Though factory work in the metropole and dominion was similar, British and Australian propaganda films present it much differently. British film allows female factory workers to display masculine characteristics, celebrating their transformations from very feminine, incompetent workers to more masculine, capable ones. In contrast, Australian film shows factory work to be a highly masculine profession that excludes women entirely.
How do these different depictions reflect societal attitudes toward gender and factory work in both countries?