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(Sociocultural) Characterization of Fraternizing Women (Sociocultural) Characterization of Fraternizing Women
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The Men’s Motivations The Men’s Motivations
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter describes the sociocultural characterization of fraternizing women. The majority opinion in Polish society was that women who socialized with German men did so for two clear reasons: money and social advancement. In fact, many of the relationships entered into during the occupation should be considered instances of survival sex. While historians and sociologists have long used the term “survival sex”, the more neutral parallel term “sexual barter” has been established in recent years as it concedes the women more agency. Indeed, many wartime relationships can be seen as complicated systems of interaction, into which the German and Polish partners brought different articles of exchange. The Germans were not always solely interested in the physical; they also sought human warmth. Other motivating factors, besides material advantages and romantic emotions, included protection and the need for human connection. Women sometimes also befriended the Germans for reasons of political sympathy, while some women thoroughly enjoyed the proximity to power. The chapter then considers the range of motives of the Reich German men in embarking on banned sexual and intimate relationships with Poles.
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