Description

Book Synopsis
This book analyses the depiction and function of politically active women in novels by six female authors from the margins of the democratic revolution of 1848 and the first German women’s movement: Louise Aston, Malwida von Meysenbug, Mathilde Franziska Anneke, Fanny Lewald, Louise Otto-Peters, and Hedwig Dohm. What was their political stance in relation to democratic developments and women’s rights? How did they render their political convictions into literary form? Which literary images did they use, criticise, or invent in order to depict politically active women in their novels in a positive light? Which narrative strategies were employed to ‘smuggle’ politically and socially radical ideas into what were sometimes ostensibly conventional plots? These authors wrote before modern feminist theory was established; however, their proto-feminist observations, demands, and discursive tactics contributed much to the formation and institutionalisation of feminist thought. This book contextualises the authors’ works in their historical and social environment in order to evaluate what can be considered radical and political in the period 1845-1919.

Trade Review
«Mikus gibt einen guten Überblick über die Anfänge der deutschen Frauenbewegung vor ihrer Institutionalisierung, über frühe feministische Strategien und viele Anregungen zum Weiterlesen.»
(Elke Spitzer, Ariadne Heft 96 2016)

Table of Contents
Contents: The Politics of Women’s Writing – Social and Legal History – Louise Aston and the Politics of the Novel – Malwida von Meysenbug: The Fight for Women’s Rights on a Personal Level – Mathilde Franziska Anneke: Fighting and Writing for the Motherland – Fanny Lewald: The Ambivalent ‘Première Dame’ of Women’s Literature – Louise Otto-Peters: Women’s Politics and Solidarity as a Matter of Course – Hedwig Dohm: ‘Bin ich ein Mensch - nichts als ein Mensch’.

The Political Woman in Print: German Women’s

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    A Paperback / softback by Birgit Mikus

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 31/07/2014
      ISBN13: 9783034317368, 978-3034317368
      ISBN10: 3034317360

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book analyses the depiction and function of politically active women in novels by six female authors from the margins of the democratic revolution of 1848 and the first German women’s movement: Louise Aston, Malwida von Meysenbug, Mathilde Franziska Anneke, Fanny Lewald, Louise Otto-Peters, and Hedwig Dohm. What was their political stance in relation to democratic developments and women’s rights? How did they render their political convictions into literary form? Which literary images did they use, criticise, or invent in order to depict politically active women in their novels in a positive light? Which narrative strategies were employed to ‘smuggle’ politically and socially radical ideas into what were sometimes ostensibly conventional plots? These authors wrote before modern feminist theory was established; however, their proto-feminist observations, demands, and discursive tactics contributed much to the formation and institutionalisation of feminist thought. This book contextualises the authors’ works in their historical and social environment in order to evaluate what can be considered radical and political in the period 1845-1919.

      Trade Review
      «Mikus gibt einen guten Überblick über die Anfänge der deutschen Frauenbewegung vor ihrer Institutionalisierung, über frühe feministische Strategien und viele Anregungen zum Weiterlesen.»
      (Elke Spitzer, Ariadne Heft 96 2016)

      Table of Contents
      Contents: The Politics of Women’s Writing – Social and Legal History – Louise Aston and the Politics of the Novel – Malwida von Meysenbug: The Fight for Women’s Rights on a Personal Level – Mathilde Franziska Anneke: Fighting and Writing for the Motherland – Fanny Lewald: The Ambivalent ‘Première Dame’ of Women’s Literature – Louise Otto-Peters: Women’s Politics and Solidarity as a Matter of Course – Hedwig Dohm: ‘Bin ich ein Mensch - nichts als ein Mensch’.

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