RECRUITING WOMEN INTO the WORLD WAR II MILITARY: the OFFICE of WAR INFORMATION, ADVERTISING and GENDER By
RECRUITING WOMEN INTO THE WORLD WAR II MILITARY: THE OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION, ADVERTISING AND GENDER by Zayna N. Bizri A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of George Mason University in Partial Fulfillment of The Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy History Committee: ___________________________________________ Director ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________ Department Chairperson ___________________________________________ Program Director ___________________________________________ Dean, College of Humanities and Social Sciences Date: _____________________________________ Fall Semester 2017 George Mason University Fairfax, VA Recruiting Women into the World War II Military: The Office of War Information, Advertising and Gender A Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at George Mason University by Zayna N. Bizri Master of Arts George Mason University, 2010 Bachelor of Arts West Chester University, 1999 Director: Christopher H. Hamner, Professor Department of History and Art History Fall Semester 2017 George Mason University Fairfax, VA Copyright 2017 Zayna N. Bizri All Rights Reserved ii DEDICATION For Chris. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Many, many thanks to the friends, family, colleagues, and gracious experts who supported me through this process. My husband and Chief Henchman Chris and First Minion Heather provided invaluable assistance in archival research, emotional and moral support in the writing process, and unwavering support throughout the madness called “getting a PhD.” The Girl Gang, Megan, Christina, Kirsten, Joanna, Rebecca, Morgan, Alyssa, Sydney, Caitlin, and Samma, kept me connect to the rest of the world. A large portion of the final product was written in the gaming room at Victory Comics, and the fabulous staff were incredibly supportive, though sometimes perplexed.
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