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Utopian Feminism : Women's Movements in Fin-de-Siecle Vienna

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Women's movements in Vienna at the turn of the 20th century made valuable and original contributions to social reform, feminist ideology and the artistic and intellectual trends of the era.

This book discusses their historical development, the activities, personalities and writings of their predominantly middle-class members, and the Viennese culture and politics in which they flourished. Harriet Anderson argues that the movements did not primarily focus on women's rights but were utopian in spirit, seeking to bring about the moral reform of society through women's efforts.

She discusses the numerous women's associations that sprang up at this time, groups that focused on women's education and employment, legal reform, state-controlled prostitution and anti-Semitism, among other issues.

Examining the General Austrian Women's Association in particular, Anderson reconstructs its history and describes the ideals that informed it, the personal loves and animosities of its leading figures, and the conflicts in which it engaged up to its decline at the time of World War I.

She next analyzes the feminists' theoretical writings, placing them in their intellectual context, investigating their poetics and showing how they were shaped by various utopian visions.

Finally, she discusses the women's fictional works, identifying two main groups of feminist writers, one that wrote mainly moral texts supporting the prevalent middle-class code of conduct, and the other that sought to investigate psychological mechanisms and expose deep-rooted oppression.

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Product Details
Yale University Press
0300057369 / 9780300057362
Hardback
305.42
19/11/1992
United Kingdom
384 pages, 16 illustrations, notes, bibliography, index
240 x 160 mm, 770 grams
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More