Discussion Questions
February 3, 2014
- What does the Win the War Suggestions tell us
about a) contemporary perceptions of women and their roles; b) contemporary perceptions of Canadian society;
c) homefront life; d) gender roles and relations. Are there
similarities and/or differences between the viewpoints of Win the War
Suggestions and the Globe editorial of February 4,
1918?
- How does the Canadian recruiting leaflet use women?
Why is such an approach used?
- Using specific examples from the illustrations and
readings, what are the values, national images, and views of the war
which are presented to the adolescent readers by Young Canada?
Be specific in your examples.
- What are the values, national images, and views of the war
which are presented to the adolescent readers by A Message to the Boys
and Girls of Canada? What do you think was the purpose of that
piece? What do you think would be its impact?
- Do you think the Globe correct in its statement that by
1918 the war hade done much to remove class distinctions and barriers?
What evidence so far from this course could you use to argue the
affirmative? To argue the negative? How does this compare to
Sangster's argument?
- What do the letters to and from women tell us about the
range of the female war experience? What did the
female war experience consist of? What are the ranges of
experiences evident in the letters?
- From the letters by women, what was the single most
significant thing you learned, and why?
- Based on the article by Sangster, what is the "watershed theory" with respect to WWI?
Looking at the questions of labour and morality, what evidence would suggest
that the war was not a watershed for Canadian women?
- What evidence could be used to argue that, for the
homefront, life continued very much as before the war? (Remember that in the
study of history, continuity is as important as change. What doesn't
change and why, is as important as what does change.)
- Given the kinds of expectations indicated in the various
readings, what kind of "pressures" do you think the homefront civilian would
feel? What kind of atmosphere or general feeling would have existed on the
homefront?