“How Ya Gonna Keep ’Em Down on the Farm, After They’ve Seen Paree?” World War I Overseas Military Service and Rural Americans’ Postwar Occupational Mobility

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Abstract

In the aftermath of World War I, U.S. discourse was animated by the concern that demobilized soldiers, having experienced the world outside of their hometowns, would resist returning to farms and to their preinduction occupations. Did military service really encourage an occupational shift? Were rural individuals especially susceptible to and was emplacement in foreign locales especially culpable for this change, as popular culture suggested? Focusing on North Dakota, a state with unusually detailed World War I records, this article uses a novel linked census–military data set and statistical analysis to examine how individuals’ place-based military experience might have inflected their postwar occupational mobility. Whereas univariate models support the contemporary perception that farm boys with overseas service were less likely to remain in agriculture, increasingly complex models suggest more nuanced interpretations, with civilian individual and contextual characteristics and their interaction being significantly predictive of farm leaving. Addressing substantive gaps in World War I historiography by contextualizing neglected subpopulations, this research also shows the value of using quantitative methods to engage with critical military geographies. Operationalizing theories of place–individual co-constitution through the analysis of longitudinal, individual data demonstrates how interest in soldiers’ experiences and in the spatiotemporally distant effects of war can be productively intertwined.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)206-225
Number of pages20
JournalAnnals of the American Association of Geographers
Volume112
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2022
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was supported by the Luxembourg National Research Fund (grant # 13397816). Thank you to the University of Colorado, where this research began; to the Université du Luxembourg, where it came to fruition; and to my data suppliers, without whom it would not have been possible. Thank you to my anonymous reviewers for their invaluable insights.

Keywords

  • World War I
  • big historical microdata
  • critical military geographies
  • occupational mobility
  • rural geography

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