Abstract

This article examines the interpersonal tensions between co-editors Auguste Fickert (1855–1910) and Marie Lang (1858–1934) to show how internal editorial conflict can stimulate transnational editorial relations. By placing the disagreement within the larger context of the international women’s movement at the turn of the century, I argue that Fickert’s vision on women’s organizations differed from Lang’s: Fickert fostered the transnational role of the periodical press, whereas Lang invested in a local approach. Although conflict has been considered a constitutive aspect of the periodical press, it has not been examined before in light of German feminist periodicals, such as Dokumente der Frauen (1899–1902), which Fickert co-edited for some time with Lang and Rosa Mayreder (1858–1938) and Neues Frauenleben (1902–17), of which she was the sole editor from 1902 to 1910. This article traces Fickert’s transnational collaborations. More specifically, it takes her connection to Finnish-born female editor Maikki Friberg (1861–1927) as a case in point to demonstrate how her personal and professional relationship with Friberg resonates through the pages of Dokumente and increasingly so, Neues Frauenleben. I will show how Fickert’s new periodical, Neues Frauenleben, benefited from her collaboration with Friberg especially, and resulted in a myriad of transnational connections that were mainly — but not only — Nordic. By taking the periodical as a locus of personal and professional conflict and collaboration, this article thus shed light on an under-researched link between female editorship and transnationality.

Highlights

  • On 26 March 1896 Polish-French feminist, journalist, writer, and editor Marya ChéligaLoévy (1854–1927)1 wrote to Auguste Fickert, the co-founder and soon-to-be president of the AÖFV or Allgemeine Österreichische Frauenverein [General Austrian Women’s Organization],2 a branch of the women’s movement in Austria that advocated for better working conditions for women and the abolishment of prostitution

  • Conflict has been considered a constitutive aspect of the periodical press, it has not been examined before in light of German feminist periodicals, such as Dokumente der Frauen (1899–1902), which Fickert co-edited for some time with Lang and Rosa Mayreder (1858–1938) and Neues Frauenleben (1902–17), of which she was the sole editor from 1902 to 1910

  • This article traces Fickert’s transnational collaborations. It takes her connection to Finnish-born female editor Maikki Friberg (1861–1927) as a case in point to demonstrate how her personal and professional relationship with Friberg resonates through the pages of Dokumente and increasingly so, Neues Frauenleben

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Summary

Introduction

On 26 March 1896 Polish-French feminist, journalist, writer, and editor Marya ChéligaLoévy (1854–1927) wrote to Auguste Fickert, the co-founder and soon-to-be president of the AÖFV or Allgemeine Österreichische Frauenverein [General Austrian Women’s Organization],2 a branch of the women’s movement in Austria that advocated for better working conditions for women and the abolishment of prostitution. I argue that the interpersonal tensions between Fickert and Lang as co-editors of Dokumente are crucial to understanding the subsequent strengthening of Fickert’s transnational ties in Neues Frauenleben In doing so, it differs from previous research on nineteenth-century women’s movements within a German-language context, which has emphasized the local unification of women, through the building of ‘sisterhoods’, to foster political and societal change. By adopting a transnational perspective on female editorship and the feminist press, I argue that conflict strengthens women editors’ desire to form international alliances, shaping new ways of sociability among women This is the case for Auguste Fickert, as she instigated and developed a transnational approach towards editing, firstly in Dokumente der Frauen alongside, and in conflict with, her co-editor Marie Lang, and subsequently as the sole editor of Neues Frauenleben. Schlesinger-Eckstein joined the women’s conference in Berlin as well as in Brussels and both occasions were documented in Das Recht der Frau.

Dokumente der Frauen and the Conflict with Marie Lang
The Influence of Maikki Friberg
Neues Frauenleben
Conclusion
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