Colonial Servicemen and their British 'War Brides': First World War Marriages in the British Empire
In: Gender & history, Band 33, Heft 2, S. 470-486
Abstract
ABSTRACTThis article uses the phenomenon and failure of war marriages between British women and 'colonial' servicemen, mostly from the settler dominions, to explore the gendered, classed and racialised conditions of migration after the First World War. Positioning this migration of British war brides as part of the continued normalisation of settler occupation, the article demonstrates the patriarchal social expectations to which white women were subject. Fears of 'khaki fever' were extended to the protection of naïve 'colonial' soldiers from the manipulative sexuality of white, particularly working‐class, women and girls. At the same time, 'respectable' women were prepared for frontier life and protected from the indignities of bigamy and desertion. The emphasis on their role as 'daughters of Empire' meant 'undesirable' matches and marital failure, as reported by the press, had consequences for the closeness of the imperial family and the maintenance of white superiority. The mediation of mobility in cases of mixed‐race marriage indicate a more explicit, and sometimes violent, policing of the sexual independence of women and Black and indigenous men of colour. In doing so, the article makes an important contribution to understandings of the legacies of global mobilisation and colonial encounters during the First World War.
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