Hedwig Dohm: Selected Texts (1898–1912)

In Nassar Dalia & Kristin Gjesdal (eds.), Women philosophers in the long nineteenth century: the German tradition. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press. pp. 122–153 (2021)
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Abstract

In this chapter, which includes four independent essays, Hedwig Dohm develops arguments for women’s emancipation, articulates a critique of essentialism, and assesses the claims of anti-feminists, including Friedrich Nietzsche. Although Dohm was influenced by Nietzsche, she was also one of his fiercest critics. Dohm offers some of the most acute observations of the situation of women at various stages of life––from young adulthood to old age. While her conceptualization of the self as creative and her support of single mothers and unmarried women were radical for the time, her ideas prefigure some of the key claims made by twentieth-century feminists.

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Anna Ezekiel
University of York

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