The role of poetry in World War I In this article I will explain the change in the attitude of the poet during the First World War. I choose a series of poems covering the beginnings of the war to the end and explain how these texts are used for various purposes. It also shows that the language of poetry is gradually changing. Poems about war from 1914 to 1918 have four basic stages. It is expectation, experience, protest, and ultimate reflection.
Prior to the First World War, women had participated in war with various roles, but in order to serve with men, they had to pretend to be themselves. But this began to change during the first war when World War I, the US Navy and the Marine Corps allowed women's participation in the army. More than 12,000 soldiers were imprisoned during the war, and about 400 people died. American women also started working for the joint service organization with the American Red Cross and for people who were unemployed in factories, offices, transportation and other wars. By the end of the First World War, American women accounted for 24% of the aviation factory workers. There are 24 million women in the UK. 1.7 million people serve their families during the war, 800 thousand people are woven, 600 thousand are clothes, and 26 thousand work in government.
World War II changed the way women observe in the labor force and the army. Due to lack of personnel due to war, women forced into the labor market, inevitably changed their role in the workplace into workplaces. Over the course of World War II, more than 6 million women were hired for the first time, professional women increased 57%. They began to work on blue collar work that previously was only available to men. Two million women will enter the defense factory to manufacture aircraft frames, engines, propellers, parachutes, gas masks and electrical equipment. These women go home and work long hours only to cook and clean their families. The American media calls these women "Rosie the Riveter". The war also gave the women the opportunity to work in war. These women played an active part in the news warfare, and some were secret agents.
Women veterans in the Second World War lived in East Valley, where CGCC students worked with the public history project of the Chandler Museum
On 4 August 1914, the UK declared a war with Germany. During the First World War, the role of women has changed dramatically. When men depart to fight abroad they are replaced by women. The woman met many of the work that needs to be brought during wartime. The greatest increase in the number of female workers is engineering. More than 700,000 of these women are working in a very dangerous ammunition industry. In 1917, Alice Woods became ammunition worker of St Helens. As her biographer, Barbara Jacobs pointed out. Strength made her extremely competent or filled with cannonballs, she was assigned a more responsible role and counted completed cannons.