Louise Otto-Peters (26 March 1819, Meissen – 13 March 1895, Leipzig) was a German suffragist and women's rights movement activist who wrote novels, poetry, essays, and libretti. She wrote for Der Wandelstern [The Wandering Star] and Sächsische Vaterlandsblätter [Saxon Fatherland Pages], and founded Frauen-Zeitung and Neue Bahnen specifically for women.[1]: 181 She is best known as the founder in 1865 of the General German Women's Association (Allgemeiner Deutscher Frauenverein).[1]: 1
Life
Louise Otto was born in Meissen,[2] the daughter of Charlotte and Wilhelm Otto, a successful lawyer.[3]: 13 She was educated by private tutors. In 1835, when she was 16, both her parents and an older sister died.[3]: 140 Otto-Peters thereafter lived with her two older sisters. At this point, she began writing novels, short stories, poetry, and political articles to make a living. She additionally worked as a journalist from 1843 "with articles about her concept of femininity, as well as women and politics".
Otto-Peters became friends with Robert Blum and other democrats, and this connection permitted her to contribute to their newspapers, specifically, Der Wandelstern [The Wandering Star] and Sächsische Vaterlandsblätter [Saxon Fatherland Pages]. By the autumn of 1843 Otto-Peters had become a regular staff member for these two publications, occasionally writing under the pseudonym of Otto Stern.[1]: 181 After the democratic revolution of 1848, Otto-Peters founded Frauen-Zeitung, the first political women's newspaper in Germany. Her newspaper brought forth a new law to be implemented which explicitly forbade women to be editors of newspapers in Saxony. Her newspaper moved from Leipzig to Gera (beyond the borders of Saxony) and under this condition was able to continue publishing until 1853.[1]: 182–183
Louise Otto became engaged to August Peters in 1849, but he was soon thereafter imprisoned for his rebellious stance against the government. They eventually married in 1858, but in 1864 August Peters died from heart disease.[3]: 140–143
Louise founded the women's journal Neue Bahnen in 1855. In 1865, Louise Otto-Peters, Minna Cauer, and other women suffragists founded the Allgemeiner Deutscher Frauenverein [General German Women's Association][1]: 1 and participated in the first women's conference in Leipzig. She was the primary editor of Neue Bahnen until her death in 1895.[4]: 943
She was called by peers the "songbird of the German women's movement". Her first socio-political novel was Ludwig the Waiter (1843), followed by Castle and Factory (1846–1847), initially confiscated but brought attention to her works.: 943 Otto-Peters called on the public for better working conditions for poor women.[3]: 13
According to Ann T. Allen:
Otto-Peters understood emancipation as the validation of qualities that she considered distinctly female, including compassion and human concern, rather than as imitation of men. She stressed the importance of these qualities to the public as well as the private sphere, arguing that well-paying jobs for women would advance the welfare of individual women in society as a whole.[5]
Recognition
The 1958 East German film Nur eine Frau (Only one Woman) is based on her life.
Published works
Louise Otto-Peters's published works as cited by An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers:[4]: 943–944
^ abcdeMikus, Birgit (2014). The Political Woman in Print: German Women's Writing 1845-1919. Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang AG, International Academic Publishers. ISBN9783034317368.
^ abcdDiethe, Carol (1998). Towards Emancipation: German Women Writers of the Nineteenth Century. Berghahn Books. ISBN1571819339.
^ abWilson, Katharina M. (1991). An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers. New York & London: Garland Publishing, Inc.
^Ann T. Allen in Dieter K. Buse and Juergen C. Doerr, eds. Modern Germany: An Encyclopedia of History, People, and Culture, 1871-1990 (2 vol. Garland, 1998) 2:737.
Further reading
Adler, Hans. "On a Feminist Controversy: Louise Otto vs. Louise Aston," in Joeres, Ruth-Ellen B. and M.J. Maynes, eds., German Women in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries: A Social and Literary History. Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1986: 193-214.
Joeres, Ruth-Ellen Boetcher. Die Anfänge der deutschen Frauenbewegung: Louise Otto-Peters. Frankfurt a/M: Fischer, 1983.
Joeres, Ruth-Ellen Boetcher. "Louise Otto and Her Journals: A Chapter in Nineteenth-Century German Feminism," in Internationales Archiv für Sozialgeschichte der deutschen Literatur, IV (1979): 100-29.
Koepcke, Cordula. Louise Otto-Peters. Die rote Demokratin. Freiburg: Herder, 1981.
Diethe, Carol. The life and work of Germany's founding feminist Louise Otto-Peters (1819 –1895). Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2002 (in English)