Abstract
Like many of their socially conservative contemporaries, the National
Socialists regarded the social and economic changes that had occurred
after the First World War as a source of social corruption. Falling
birth rates, rising divorce rates, later marriages, and growing numbers
of working women—all this was seen as symptomatic of a sick society.
Therefore, the Nazi regime promoted a return to patriarchal values and
gender roles, presenting these changes as their ostensible
justification. Early marriage and large families were praised as the
ideal. According to National Socialist thought, women were to make home
and children their central concern, whereas men were supposed to earn
enough to support them. In reality, however, the Nazis were less
concerned with restoring the traditional social order than with giving
the family a central place in the regime’s military and racist
worldview. Early marriage and high birthrates were supposed to maintain
the competitiveness of the German people in the ongoing battle with
“inferior” races. In other words, the image of the family as the
“nucleus of the nation” served chiefly to ensure that future generations
of soldiers would be conceived, born, and raised.