162. |
Elsa Herrmann, This is the New Woman (1929)
Elsa Herrmann (1893-?) first trained and worked as a teacher at the Höhere Israelitische Bürgerschule [Israelite Secondary School] in Leipzig before she earned a Ph.D. in law from Leipzig....
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164. |
Frank Warschauer, "The Future of Opera on the Radio" (1929)
On June 8, 1921 – well before regular radio programs began airing in Germany – a performance of Giacomo Puccini’s Madam Butterfly was broadcast from the Berlin State Opera. It was the first....
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165. |
Friedrich von Bodelschwingh, Lecture in Lübeck on Questions Relating to Eugenics (1929)
In this 1929 lecture, Protestant theologian and public health advocate Friedrich von Bodelschwingh....
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166. |
Helene Stöcker, "Marriage as a Psychological Problem" (1929)
In 1905, pacifist, women’s rights advocate, and sexual reformer Helene Stöcker (1869-1943) co-founded the Bund für Mutterschutz und Sexualreform [Association for the Protection of Mothers....
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167. |
Hilde Walter, "The Misery of the New Mittelstand" (1929)
Hilde Walter (1895-1976) was a social worker until 1918. After World War I she became a journalist in Berlin. In this article published in Die Weltbühne she describes the social circumstances....
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168. |
Lola Landau, "The Companionate Marriage" (1929)
German-Jewish writer Lola (Leonore) Landau (1892-1990) was best known as a poet, but she also wrote plays, radio plays, and articles for various publications. This article appeared in Die Tat,....
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169. |
Max Brod, "Women and the New Objectivity" (1929)
This essay by writer and critic Max Brod (1884-1968) was included in the publication Die Frau von Morgen, wie wir sie wünschen [The Woman of the Future as We Wish Her to Be] (1929),....
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