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Jane Misme (1865–1935) was a French journalist and feminist. She founded the feminist journal La Française (The Frenchwoman), published from 1906 to 1934, and was a member of the executive of the French Union for Women's Suffrage and the National Council of French Women .
La Française, subtitled Journal de progrès féminin, was a French language reformist feminist weekly newspaper published in France. It was founded in 1906 by feminist Jane Misme, who ran it until 1926, when Cécile Brunschvicg, the future under-secretary of state under the Popular Front, took over. The title was published until 1940.
The UFSF was founded by a group of feminists who had attended a national congress of French feminists in Paris in 1908. [1] Most of them were from bourgeois or intellectual backgrounds. [2] The leaders were Jane Misme (1865–1935), editor of La Française, and Jeanne Schmahl (1846–1915).
Jane Misme (1865–1935) – journalist, ... (1853–1924) – proponent of pronatalism and alcoholic abstinence, president of the French Union for Women's Suffrage;
The French Union for Women's Suffrage (UFSF: Union française pour le suffrage des femmes) was founded by a group of feminists who had attended a national congress of French feminists in Paris in 1908. [9] Most of them were from bourgeois or intellectual backgrounds. [10] The leaders were Jeanne Schmahl and Jane Misme. [9]
Sarah Monod was a member of journal L'Avant-Courriere (founded in 1893), and even joined the French Union for Women's Suffrage. But her feminism, a term she disliked [ g ] was "dignified without stiffness, tenacious without arrogance, persevering without bitterness, warm without passion".
The French Union for Women's Suffrage (UFSF: Union française pour le suffrage des femmes) was founded by a group of feminists who had attended a national congress of French feminists in Paris in 1908, led by Jeanne Schmahl and Jane Misme. [2]
One of the first movements openly claiming to be a mass feminist movement, the Union des femmes pour la défense de Paris et les soins aux blessés (Union of Women for the Defense of Paris and the Care of the Wounded) was created on 11 April 1871, [12] in a café on rue du Temple by Nathalie Lemel and Élisabeth Dmitrieff.