Free Soul, Free Woman?: A Study of Selected Fictional Works by Hedwig Dohm, Isolde Kurz, and Helene BöhlauP. Lang, 1995 - 177 Seiten In their lifetime, Hedwig Dohm (1831-1919) and Helene Böhlau (1856-1940) earned the praise of women's rights activists such as Minna Cauer and Helene Stöcker for their contributions to modern women's literature. Dohm engaged in debates on the women's movement with Lou Andreas-Salomé, Ellen Key, and Laura Marholm. Böhlau shocked the reading public with her novel Halbtier¿, in which a woman triumphs after killing an abusive man. On the other hand, Isolde Kurz (1853-1944), who distanced herself from the women's movement, seems the odd woman out. Yet boundaries among these writers are more fluid than expected, especially in their portrayals of sexuality and spirituality. |
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Introduction | 1 |
Hedwig Dohm | 23 |
Isolde Kurz | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Agnes Andreas argues arguments artist attempts become Berlin body Böhlau bourgeois career century characters child condemned critical critique cultural death described desire Deutsche Deutsche Rundschau deutschen difference Dohm's economic emancipation emancipatory emphasis equality erotic essays feels female feminist fiction finds Fischer Frau Frauen Further Geburtstag gender German Hedwig Dohm Helene Hermann human ideal important included individual intellectual Isolde Kurz Italy Kurz's Leben Leipzig Liebe limited literarische Echo Literatur lives male Mann Märchen Marie Marlene marriage married Mayreder Monatshefte Monika moral mother Munich Mutter nature needs Neue never nicht notes novel novella offers political position protagonist published quotes relationship sexuality social Society spiritual struggle Stuttgart suffering traditional transcendence turn Vanadis Vanadis's Weib woman women women's movement writes Zeit Zeitung