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Marianne Adelaide Hedwig Dohm (German pronunciation:[ˈheːtvɪçˈdoːm]; née Schlesinger, later Schleh; 20 September 1831 – 1 June 1919) was a German feminist and writer.
Family
Hedwig Dohm was born in the Prussian capital Berlin to assimilated Jewish parents, and her father was baptized as a Christian.[1][2][3] The third child of (Henriette) Wilhelmine Jülich (née Beru) and tobacco manufacturer Gustav Adolph Gotthold Schlesinger (originally Elchanan Cohen Schlesinger). Her father had converted to Protestantism in 1817; in 1851 he adopted the surname Schleh. Hedwig's parents did not marry until 1838, as her father's family had strong reservations about this marital union, and had threatened his son with disinheritance if he married Jülich, who was also born out of wedlock.
While her brothers were enabled to attend the Gymnasium, Hedwig had to leave school at the age of 15, to help out with household chores. Three years later, she began an apprenticeship at a teaching seminary.
In 1853 she became the wife of writer and actor Ernst Dohm (Elias Levy; 1819–1883), editor-in-chief of the Kladderadatsch satirical magazine, with whom she had five children:
By her daughter Gertrude Hedwig, she became grandmother of Katharina "Katia" Pringsheim (1883–1980), the wife of Thomas Mann, and of the musician Klaus Pringsheim Sr. (1883–1972). By another daughter, Marie Pauline Adelheid, she became grandmother of Hedda Korsch, a communist activist and educationalist who married Karl Korsch.
Life
Hedwig and her husband associated with the intellectual circles in Berlin, the future German capital. In 1867 she published her first study, on the historical development of Spanish national literature, based on the knowledge she had taught herself on an autodidactic basis. From the early 1870s onwards, she published feminist treatises demanding legal, social and economic equality, as well as women's suffrage. These essays encountered opposition by feminists who concentrated on better educational opportunities for young women. In the late 1870s, Hedwig wrote several theatre comedies that were all performed at the Berlin Schauspielhaus.
After her husband died in 1883, she began to write novels, until from the late 1880s she again published numerous treatises on the revived feminist movement. Hedwig Dohm also founded the Reform association advocating a comprehensive educational reform and female university studies. She joined the Frauenwohl ("Women's Welfare") association founded by Minna Cauer as well as Helene Stöcker's League for the Protection of Mothers (Bund für Mutterschutz).
Hedwig Dohm publicly spoke out against the patriotic fever on the eve of World War I, publishing pacifist articles in the communist journal Die Aktion edited by Franz Pfemfert.
Hedwig Dohm was an early pioneer of feminism, and demanded equal education and training for girls as for boys. She was convinced that economic independence was the only way for women to no longer inevitably end up in "marriage prison", but rather to be able to voluntarily, thanks to economic independence, decide for or against an equal partnership with a man.[4]
In addition to the demands for equal education and female employment, she spoke out vehemently for women's suffrage.
Helene Lange judged in 1925: "The disrespect and self-confidence with which Hedwig Dohm wielded her witty pen against men was too unfamiliar to many women who had been brought up in the fear of the Lord."[5]
In The Antifeminists[6] from 1902, Hedwig Dohm uses humorous language to uncover the ideologies of the thought leaders and opinion makers of her own time and exposes their contradictions and fear of the female gender as a stupid defense of claims to power.
In The Mothers[7] from 1903, Dohm addresses motherly love, which, in her view, is not a natural instinct, but is instilled (and, in the absence of other fields of activity for women, cultivated). In order that mothers can continue to pursue their jobs, she suggests having housework and child-rearing done by institutions.
Appreciation
Since 1991, the Association of Women Journalists has awarded the Hedwig Dohm certificate to women every year for their outstanding journalistic (lifetime) achievements and their commitment to women's politics.
On October 25, 1994, a street in the new Freiburg district of Rieselfeld was named after her.[8]
Hedwig-Dohm-Straße in Berlin at the Südkreuz long-distance train station, on the corner of Hildegard-Knef-Platz, has had her name since 2007.[9]
^Stephan Meder, Arne Duncker, Andrea Czelk (23 September 2023), Die Rechtsstellung der Frau um 1900, Köln / Weimar / Wien: Böhlau Verlag, p. 305, ISBN978-3-412-20577-5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)