Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Sophie Adlersparre (1823–1895), journalist, editor, women's rights activist; Charlotte Agell (born 1959), English-language works for children and young adults; Catharina Ahlgren (1734–1800) Astrid Ahnfelt (1876–1962), writer, translator and editor, fostered cultural relations between Sweden and Italy; Sonja Åkesson (1926–1977), poet ...
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:Swedish writers. It includes writers that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Contents
The first volume was published in 1993 in Swedish and Danish and the last in 1998. A digital version was released in Danish, Swedish, and English in 2012. As of February 2015 the online version hosts 235 articles and bibliographical information for 821 writers. It is searchable and organized by name, country, period, and keyword.
This was the first time the Swedish women's movement itself had officially presented a demand for suffrage. In 1902 the Swedish Society for Woman Suffrage was founded, supported by the Social Democratic women's Clubs. [24] In 1906, the suggestion of women's suffrage was again voted down in parliament. [45]
Feminism in Sweden is a significant social and political influence within Swedish society. [1] [2] Swedish political parties across the political spectrum commit to gender-based policies in their public political manifestos. [3] The Swedish government assesses all policy according to the tenets of gender mainstreaming.
Fredrika Bremer (17 August 1801 – 31 December 1865) was a Finnish-born Swedish writer and reformer.Her Sketches of Everyday Life were wildly popular in Britain and the United States during the 1840s and 1850s and she is regarded as the Swedish Jane Austen, bringing the realist novel to prominence in Swedish literature.
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:21st-century Swedish writers. It includes Swedish writers that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. See also: Category:21st-century Swedish male writers
Both her parents came to Sweden as refugees during the Second World War. Her father was a German anti-Nazi from a relatively affluent family, while her mother was an Estonian from a poor peasant's family. Her parents divorced early, and she grew up with her mother. Ebba Witt-Brattström (born 1953), Swedish professor of literature.