Parents and Children

  • Hester Vaizey
Part of the Genders and Sexualities in History book series (GSX)

Abstract

‘I try to be a stand-in father for Mummy, because I’m practical like you and Mummy’s not good at that sort of thing’ wrote 11-year-old Ulli Fromann on 3 December 1945 to her father who she had not seen since she was five. Like many other children, Ulli had taken on responsibilities at an early age to help her mother counter the challenging conditions of the era. Yet even with this help, her mother Christiane described the difficulties they faced making ends meet in bombed-out Berlin. The shortages of food were particularly tough, she told her husband Hans, especially when confronted with the constant pleas for more to eat from her children Ulli and Jutta. The best she could offer, she said, was to let them take it in turns to scrape out the saucepans after supper. The Fromann’s were typical of many families across Germany who were negotiating inimical circumstances at the end of the war.1

Keywords

Social History Gender Study Challenging Condition Modern History European History 
These keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.

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Notes

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Copyright information

© Hester Vaizey 2010

Authors and Affiliations

  • Hester Vaizey
    • 1
  1. 1.Alfred Toepfer StiftungHamburgGermany

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