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Luise Büchner

    June 12, 1821 – November 28, 1877

    Luise Büchner, the youngest sister of the renowned Georg and Wilhelm Büchner, emerged as a pioneering German feminist of the 19th century and a celebrated author. Following her influential work on women's roles, she dedicated herself to numerous other publications and articles addressing the "woman question." Her literary output also encompassed German history, poetry, and prose. Her writings are characterized by a profound engagement with social issues and the evolving position of women in society.

    Der Matrose vom Alabama
    Frauenherz
    Ein Dichter
    Frauenherz
    Deutsche Geschichte von 1815-1870
    Women and their vocation
    • 1999

      Women and their vocation

      • 127 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Writing in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1848, Luise Bchner argued strongly for the reform of women's education in her best-known work, Women and Their Vocation. Although she accepted the nineteenth-century view of the primacy of home and family for women, she believed that an appropriate education was necessary for the development of a woman's skills and intellect. Only then could women make their fullest contribution to society, whether through their influence within the family circle, or by acting in the public sphere. Women and Their Vocation presents a translation of Bchner's essay and an introduction to her life and the issues related to a woman's role in nineteenth-century Germany.

      Women and their vocation