De-coding the Gendered Order of Memory in Hitlers Frauen

TitleDe-coding the Gendered Order of Memory in Hitlers Frauen
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2008
AuthorsClaudia Lenz, Kirsten Heinsohn
JournalGerman Politics & Society
Volume26
Issue4
Pagination134-149
ISSN10450300
Abstract

Building on the assumption that cultural representations of the past contribute to the establishment and regulation of gendered power relations, this article investigates the representations of female participation in the Nazi regime in the German television series Hitlers Frauen. Stuart Hall's concept of decoding is used for a critical media analysis, asking how men and women are positioned as historical agents or passive objects in the series. In fact, the series plays on the gendered symbols and representations associated with the Third Reich. It reproduces traditional ideas regarding the (non)relation between femininity and politics and evokes a sexualized imaginary where women are seduced by a powerful, charismatic leader. Women are represented as dependent–materially, physically, and emotionally. In this way, the television series contributes to the continuation of traditional gender regimes. Even when the series apparently reacts to ongoing debates about women's role within the Nazi system, it disappoints those who hoped to learn about the reasons, interests, and possibilities of women between 1933 and 1945.

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DOI10.3167/gps.2008.260408