Kopsavilkums
The Riga-born playwright, feature writer and translator Laura Marholm (1854-1928) was a distinctive albeit contradictory public figure and was well-known in Latvia, Germany and Scandinavia. With the conviction that a woman can succeed in reaching her goals through the intercession of an intermediary, most often a man, Marholm was in conflict with representatives of the women's emancipation movement. Her contemporaries called her an anti-feminist; reference literature listed her as a difference feminist who, among other things, contributed to the promotion and development of the cult of motherhood. In Latvia, press publications referred to Marholm as an authority in the field of women's psychology. She was a popular amateur who dealt with a fashionable theme of the era - psychology. Together with her husband, Swedish writer Ola Hansson (1860-1925), she corresponded with famous personalities in Scandinavia, Germany and France. The Hanssons came into conflict with many of them which, in turn, increasingly pushed to the couple into creative self-isolation. This article investigates Marholm's influence on the discourse about women's emancipation in the German-language press of Latvia from the late 1870s up until the late 1920s.
| Tulkotais devuma nosaukums | Publicistes Lauras Marholmas pienesums sieviešu emancipācijas diskursā Latvijas vācu presē 19. un 20. gadsimta mijā |
|---|---|
| Oriģinālvaloda | Angļu |
| Lapas (no-līdz) | 136-168 |
| Žurnāls | Letonica |
| Sējums | 2023 |
| Izdevuma numurs | 49 |
| DOIs | |
| Publikācijas statuss | Publicēts - 2023 |
OECD Zinātnes nozare
- 6.2 Valodniecība un literatūrzinātne
Nospiedums
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