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Rösträtt för kvinnor


Rösträtt för kvinnor


Rösträtt för kvinnor ('Suffrage for Women') was a journal published by the Swedish National Association for Women's Suffrage. It was first published in 1912 and the last issue was published in 1919, when the Riksdag (Swedish Parliament) decided to extend universal suffrage to men and women. The journal's motto was: "We can never do as much for a great cause as a great cause can do for us."

History

The National Association for Women's Suffrage (Landsföreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt, LKPR) had been using the Fredrika Bremer Association's journal Dagny as a mouthpiece. Cooperation between the two could be problematic at times; LKPR was against the fact that the editors of Dagny also allowed opponents of suffrage to publish in the journal. The collaboration ended in 1911, and the following year LKPR published the first issue of Rösträtt för kvinnor.

Its first editor was Elisabeth Krey-Lange, followed by Ester Brisman from 1913 to 1914; Brisman was then editor-in-chief from 1913 to 1919. Most of the most prominent figures in the Swedish women's movement contributed articles, including Gulli Petrini, Anna Lindhagen, Ellen Key, Lydia Wahlström, Elsa Collin, Karolina Widerström, Anna Bugge-Wicksell, and Signe Bergman.

Eight years after the journal's launch, in May 1919, Parliament voted to extend the right to vote to women. The June 1919 issue was devoted entirely to suffrage reform and women's new role as citizens. The last issue of the journal was published in December 1919.

See also

  • Hertha (magazine)
  • Idun (magazine)
  • Morgonbris
  • Tidevarvet
  • Tidskrift för hemmet

References

Notes

Sources

  • Nordenstam, Anna, ed. (2014). Nya röster: Svenska kvinnotidskrifter under 150 år (in Swedish). Gidlunds förlag. pp. 41–42, 70. ISBN 9789178448920.

External links

  • Gothenburg University Library: All issues of Rösträtt för kvinnor in PDF format (in Swedish)


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Rösträtt för kvinnor by Wikipedia (Historical)


Annie Åkerhielm


Annie Åkerhielm


Anna Vilhelmina Elisabet Åkerhielm (18 November 1869 – 20 July 1956) was a Swedish writer and journalist. She wrote numerous novels, as well as for Swedish newspapers throughout her career. Her 1900 verse novel Bröderna won her a Mindre guldmedaljen award from the Swedish Academy. Åkerhielm was known as an active campaigner against women's suffrage and democracy.

Life

Annie Åkerhielm was born on 18 November 1869 in Malmö, Sweden. She was the second child of Catharina Quiding and Nils Herman Quiding, a district court judge, who was one of the leading utopian socialists of Sweden. Growing up in a remote and strict family, Åkerhielm lived a childhood of isolation. At this time, she read voraciously and acquired an interest in writing.

In 1898, Åkerhielm published her first novel Hvidehus, at the age of 29. The novel was influenced by Åkerhielm's anger over the Greco-Turkish War of 1897. It won the grand prize at Idun magazine's novel competition. Two more poetry collections followed in the next few years. She won the Mindre guldmedaljen award from the Swedish Academy for her verse novel Bröderna (1900). In 1901, she published the novel Ett främmande namn which was inspired by her travel to Greece. She wrote nearly 50 other novels in the following years with her last novel Katinka gör karriär, published in 1945.

Åkerhielm had an extremely productive literary career. She was hailed by contemporary critics for portraying the lives of people in her works. Her writings were recognised by publications such as Svenska Dagbladet, and by mainstream critics such as Carl David af Wirsén, and she was compared to literary author Selma Lagerlöf. Stockholms Dagblad praised Åkerhielm's boldness in voicing "old, old thoughts" in her novels.

Åkerhielm actively campaigned against women's suffrage and democracy, publishing the novel Fru Fanny, as well as the poetry Till Skånes kvinna, in 1904. She married Dan Åkerhielm, the editor-in-chief of the newspaper Gefle-Posten, in 1906. The marriage helped to initiate her career in journalism. She began working as a journalist for the newspaper, contributing articles on literary, political, and foreign scenes. In 1912, the couple moved to Stockholm, where they started working for the conservative newspaper Nya Dagligt Allehanda. Åkerhielm worked for the newspaper until her retirement in 1936. She expressed sympathy for Adolf Hitler, later calling him the saviour of Europe. She hoped that a new Hitler would take power in Europe one day.

Åkerhielm died in Stockholm, on 20 July 1956.

References

Further reading

  • Annie Åkerhielm at Svenskt kvinnobiografiskt lexikon

External links

  • Media related to Annie Åkerhielm at Wikimedia Commons


Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Annie Åkerhielm by Wikipedia (Historical)






Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: by Wikipedia (Historical)