Biblioteca / 2000-2009
Sylvia Paletschek y Bianka Pietrow‐Ennker (eds.) Women’s Emancipation Movements in the Nineteenth Century: A European Perspective.
Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, 2004. 445 páginas.
Contents
PART I. INTRODUCTION
1. Concepts and Issues / Sylvia Paletschek and Bianka Pietrow-Ennker
2. Challenging Male Hegemony: Feminist Criticism and the Context for Women’s Movements in the Age of European Revolutions and Counterrevolutions, 1789-1860 / Karen Offen
PART II. WESTERN AND CENTRAL EUROPE
3. Recovering Lost Political Cultures: British Feminisms, 1860-1900 / Jane Rendall
4. History and Historiography of First-Wave Feminism in the Netherlands, 1860-1922 / Mineke Bosch
5. The French Feminist Movement and Republicanism, 1868-1914 / Florence Rochefort
6. The Women’s Movement in Germany in an International Context / Ute Gerhard
PART III. NORTHERN AUROPE
7. Modernity and the Norwegian Women’s Movement from the 1880s to 1914: Changes and Continuities / Ida Blom
8. Gender and Feminism in Sweden: The Fredrika Bremer Association / Ulla Manns
PART IV. EAST CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
9. The Emancipation of Women for the Benefit of the Nation: The Czech Women’s Movement / Jitka Malecková
10. Sisters or Foes: The Shifting Front Lines of the Hungarian Women’s Movements, 1896-1918 / Judith Szapor
11. The Polish Women’s Movement to 1914 / Bogna Lorence-Kot and Adam Winiarz
12. Feminism and Equality in an Authoritarian State: The Politics of Women’s Liberation in Late Imperial Russia / Linda Edmondson
PART V. SOUTHERN EUROPE
13. The Rise of the Women’s Movement in Nineteenth-Century Spain / Mary Nash
14. National and Gender Identity in Turn-of-the-Century Greece / Eleni Varikas
PART VI. COMPARATIVE VIEWS
15. British and American Feminism: Personal, Intellectual, and Practical Connections / Christine Bolt
16. Women’s Emancipation Movements in Europe in the Long Nineteenth Century: Conclusions / Sylvia Paletschek and Bianka Pietrow-Ennker