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{{Infobox writer
{{AFC submission|d|bio|u=Gecko990|ns=118|decliner=SwisterTwister|declinets=20151203173820|ts=20151203165330}} <!-- Do not remove this line! -->
|name = Etta Federn
|image = Etta Federn in Barcelona, 1934.png
|image_size =
|caption = Etta Federn in Barcelona, 1934
|birth_name =
|birth_date = April 28, 1883
|birth_place = Vienna, Austria
|death_date = {{death date and age|1951|5|9|1883|4|28}}
|death_place = Paris, France
|occupation = Writer, translator
|genres = Literary biography, women's history
|pseudonym = Etta Federn-Kohlhaas, Marietta Federn, Etta Federn-Kirmsse, Esperanza
}}{{Anarcha-feminism sidebar|people}}
'''Etta Federn-Kohlhaas''' (April 28, 1883 – May 9, 1951) or '''Marietta Federn''', also published as '''Etta Federn-Kirmsse''' and '''Esperanza''', was a writer, translator, educator and important woman of letters in pre-war Germany.<ref>{{Cite web|title = ARIADNE – Projekt "Frauen in Bewegung" – Etta Federn, online bibliography.|url = http://www.onb.ac.at/ariadne/vfb/bio_federnetta.htm|website = www.onb.ac.at|access-date = 2015-12-03|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151208151549/http://www.onb.ac.at/ariadne/vfb/bio_federnetta.htm|archive-date = 2015-12-08|url-status = dead}}</ref><ref name="Bio">{{cite book|last1=Wininger|first1=Salomon|title=Grosse Jüdische National-Biographie|section=Federn-Kohlhaas, Etta|date=1935|page=494}}</ref> In the 1920s and 1930s, she was active in the ] movement in Germany and Spain.


== Early life and education ==
{{AFC comment|1=As I'm also not sure this fully satisfies notability guidelines, this could simply still use any more available information and sources overall. ] ] 17:38, 3 December 2015 (UTC)}}
She born in Vienna, Austria, to a distinguished Jewish family. Her mother, Ernestine Federn, was a member of the ]. Her father, Salomon Federn, was a prominent doctor and pioneer in the monitoring of blood pressure.<ref>{{cite web|title=Federn, Joseph Salomon|url=http://austria-forum.org/af/AEIOU/Federn%2C_Joseph_Salomon/Federn%2C_Joseph_Salomon_english|website=Austria-Forum|access-date=2 December 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Ernst|first1=Rosita Anna|title=Die Familie Federn im Wandel der Zeit – Eine biographische und werksgeschichtliche Analyse einer psychoanalytisch orientierten Familie|date=2008|publisher=GRIN|pages=33–35}}</ref> Her paternal grandfather Elias Bunzelfedern was a well-known liberal rabbi in Prague.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Alexander |first1=Franz |title=Psychoanalytic Pioneers |date=1966 |publisher=Basic Books |location=New York |page=143}}</ref>


Her sister Else was a social worker in Vienna, active in the Settlement Movement. A park in Vienna was named for her in 2013.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Rastl|first1=Charlotte|title=Else Federn|url=http://www.unless-women.eu/biography-details/items/federn.html|website=Unlearned Lessons|access-date=2 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208130300/http://www.unless-women.eu/biography-details/items/federn.html|archive-date=8 December 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Queer Places: Else-Federn-Park|url=http://www.elisarolle.com/queerplaces/ch-d-e/Else%20Federn.html|access-date=4 September 2022}}</ref>
{{AFC comment|1=Fully satisfies notability guidelines. I used some reviews and online sources from the German article. Polentarion ] 20:51, 3 December 2015 (UTC)}}


Her brother ] was a psychoanalyst and, with colleague ] a follower of ]. An expert on ego psychology and the treatment of psychosis, he served as vice president of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Alexander |first1=Franz |last2=Grotjahn |first2=Martin |last3=Eisenstein |first3=Samuel |title=Psychoanalytic Pioneers |date=1995 |publisher=Transaction Publishers |page=156}}</ref>


In Vienna and Berlin, Etta Federn studied literary history, German philology and Ancient Greek.<ref name="Bio" />
----


== Career ==
{{Infobox writer <!--For more information, see ].-->
Federn moved to Berlin in 1905, where she became a literary critic, translator, novelist and biographer. She worked in many genres, publishing articles, biographies, literary studies and poetry. She published 23 books in Germany, among them translations from the Danish, Russian, Bengali, Ancient Greek, Yiddish and English. She also published two books while living in Spain. She also wrote a young adult novel, ''Ein Sonnenjahr'' (A Year of Sun), as well as an adult novel that remained unpublished. ]As a journalist, she was a literary critic for the ], an influential liberal newspaper. She wrote biographies of ] and ] (wife of ]).<ref name=Bio/> In 1927, she published a biography of ], the liberal Jewish Foreign Minister of Germany, who had been assassinated in 1922 by anti-Semitic right-wing terrorists. Her biography was reviewed by ] for the ], which called Federn's account "amazingly lucid and precise" and said it "gives a beautifully clear idea of life."<ref>{{Cite news|title=Rathenau in a New German Biography|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1927/11/20/archives/rathenau-in-a-new-german-biography-walther-rathenau-sein-leben-und.html|last=Reuter|first=Gabriele|access-date=August 6, 2020|work=New York Times|date=20 November 1927 }}</ref> Following the book’s publication, Federn became the target of Nazi death threats.<ref name=Libcom/>
| name = Etta Federn
| honorific_prefix =
| honorific_suffix =
| image =
| image_size =
| alt =
| caption =
| pseudonym =
| birth_name =
| birth_date = April 28, 1883
| birth_place = Vienna, Austria
| death_date = May 9, 1951, age 68
| death_place = Paris, France
| resting_place =
| occupation = Writer, Translator
| language = German, Spanish, Danish, Russian, Ancient Greek, Yiddish, English
| genres = Literary Biography, Women's History
| subject = <!-- or: | subjects = -->
| movement =
| notableworks = <!-- or: | notablework = -->
}}


During the 1920s, Federn became part of a circle of anarchists, including ], ], ], ], and ] Rocker, who would become her close friend.<ref>{{cite web|title=Etta Federn|url=http://ita.anarchopedia.org/Etta_Federn|website=Anarcopedia|access-date=3 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151208111231/http://ita.anarchopedia.org/Etta_Federn|archive-date=8 December 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title = Etta Federn — eine jüdisch-libertäre Pionierin « Bücher – nicht nur zum Judentum|url = http://buecher.hagalil.com/2009/06/etta-federn/|website = buecher.hagalil.com| date=17 June 2009 |access-date = 2015-12-03}}</ref> She contributed to various anarchist newspapers and journals related to the ].<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|title = Etta Federn (1883–1951) und die Mujeres Libres {{!}} gwr 225 {{!}} januar 1998|url = http://www.graswurzel.net/225/federn.shtml|website = www.graswurzel.net|access-date = 2015-12-03}}</ref>
'''Etta Federn-Kohlhaas''' (born 1883 in Vienna; died 1951 in Paris) or '''Marietta Federn''', also published as '''Etta Kirmsse''' and '''Esperanza''', was a writer, translator and educator and important woman of letters in Germany.<ref>{{Cite web|title = ARIADNE - Projekt "Frauen in Bewegung" - Etta Federn, the online bib quotes as well an entry in Salomon Wininger: Große jüdische National-Biographie. II. Nachtrag in Bd. 7. 1935, p.494|url = http://www.onb.ac.at/ariadne/vfb/bio_federnetta.htm|website = www.onb.ac.at|accessdate = 2015-12-03}}</ref>. She was active in the ] movement<ref>{{cite web|title=Etta Federn-Kohlhaas|url=https://de.wikipedia.org/Etta_Federn-Kohlhaas|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref>. Raised in Vienna in a Jewish family, she moved in 1905 to Berlin, where she became a literary critic, translator, novelist and biographer. In 1932, she moved to Barcelona, Spain, where she joined the anarchist-feminist group ], (Free Women)<ref name="Libcom">{{cite web|last1=Heath|first1=Nick|title=Federn, Marietta aka Etta 1883- 1951| url=http://libcom.org/history/federn-marietta-etta-1883-1951|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref>, becoming a writer and educator for the movement. In 1938, she fled to France, where she survived World War II in hiding.


In 1927, her book ''Goethe's Faust'' received a favorable review in the ], again by ]. who wrote that the "simple, objectively written little book is to be recommended particularly to foreigners and young people," demystifying ''Faust'' by viewing it as Goethe's "spiritual and intellectual autobiography."<ref>{{cite news |last1=Reuter |first1=Gabriele |title=Sin and Atonement in a German Novel |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1927/05/08/96646843.pdf?pdf_redirect=true&ip=0 |access-date=10 November 2023 |date=May 8, 1927}}</ref>
In Germany, she published 23 books, among them translations from the Danish, Russian, Bengali, Ancient Greek, Yiddish and English. She also published two books while living in Spain.


In Berlin, Federn also met and translated several Polish-born Jewish poets who wrote in Yiddish. In 1931, her translation of the Yiddish poetry collection '''' (Fishing Village) by ] was published. ] gave the book a favorable review, admiring Stencl's "passionate poetic emotion."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Valencia|first1=Heather|title=Stencl's Berlin Period|url=http://yiddish.haifa.ac.il/tmr/tmr07/tmr07004.htm|access-date=4 December 2015}}</ref> (The work would soon be destroyed in the ]).
The story of Etta Federn and her two sons inspired the 1948 play ''Skuggan av Mart'' (Marty's Shadow) by Swedish writer ]. In 2015, the play had a staged reading in English translation in New York City.<ref>{{cite web|title='Marty's Shadow'|url=http://www.nybooks.com/event/martys-shadow/|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref>


In 1932, Federn left Berlin, realizing that under the Nazis she would no longer be able to publish her writing. She moved with her sons to Barcelona, Spain, where she joined the anarchist movement ] (Free Women), which provided such services as maternity centers, daycare centers, and literacy training to women. She learned Spanish and became director of four progressive schools in the city of Blanes, educating both teachers and children in secular values and antimilitarism.<ref name=Libcom/> In 1934, she was interviewed in the magazine ''La Mirador'' about a controversy concerning her ], an art she had practiced for many years, and whether it contributed to the suicide of a young man in Barcelona. She denied that her palm reading had any connection.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Brachfeld |first1=Oliver |title=La Señora Etta Federn |url=https://www.estelnegre.org/documents/federn/federn01.jpg |access-date=10 November 2023 |date=August 2, 1934}}</ref>
== Personal life ==


Starting in 1936, she published articles in the movement's women-run ] magazine, also called ''Mujeres Libres''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ackelsberg|first1=Martha|author-link1=Martha Ackelsberg|title=Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women|url=https://archive.org/details/freewomenspainan00acke|url-access=limited|date=2005|publisher=AK Press|pages=–268|isbn=9781902593968 }}</ref><ref name="Libcom">{{cite web|last1=Heath|first1=Nick|title=Federn, Marietta aka Etta 1883–1951| url=http://libcom.org/history/federn-marietta-etta-1883-1951|access-date=2 December 2015}}</ref> All issues of the magazine, known for its passionate writing and sophisticated design, can be viewed at
Raised in a successful and assimilated Jewish family in Vienna, Etta Federn was the daughter of suffragist Ernestine (Spitzer)<ref>{{cite web|title=Ernestine Spitzer|url=https://www.wien.gv.at/index.php/Ernestine_Spitzer|website=Wien Geschichte Wiki|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref> and Dr. Salomon Federn, a pioneer in the use of blood pressure monitoring<ref>{{cite web|title=Federn, Joseph Salomon|url=http://austria-forum.org/af/AEIOU/Federn%2C_Joseph_Salomon/Federn%2C_Joseph_Salomon_english|website=Austria-Forum|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Ernst|first1=Rosita Anna|title=Die Familie Federn im Wandel der Zeit - Eine biographische und werksgeschichtliche Analyse einer psychoanalytisch orientierten Familie|date=2008|publisher=GRIN|pages=33-35|accessdate=4 December 2015}}</ref>. Her brother ], a psychoanalyst, was an early follower and associate of ]. Her brother Walther Federn was an important economic journalist in Austria before Hitler came to power,<ref>{{cite web|title=Walther Federn|url=https://de.wikipedia.org/Walther_Federn|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref> and her brother Karl Federn was a lawyer who, after fleeing to the UK, became known for his anti-Marxist writings.<ref>{{cite web|title=Karl Federn|url=https://de.wikipedia.org/Karl_Federn|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref> Her sister Else Federn was a social worker in Vienna, active in the Settlement Movement; a park in Vienna was named for her in 2013.<ref>{{cite web|last1=Rastl|first1=Charlotte|title=Else Federn|url=http://www.unless-women.eu/biography-details/items/federn.html|website=Unlearned Lessons|accessdate=2 December 2015}}</ref>


Like many anarchist women, Etta Federn believed in the importance of literacy for women, in birth control and sexual freedom,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Herzog|first1=Dagmar|title=Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History|url=https://archive.org/details/sexualityeuropet00herz|url-access=limited|date=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=}}</ref> and in the power of educated women to be good mothers. She wrote: "Educated mothers relate their own experiences and sufferings to their children; they intuitively understand their feelings and expressions. They are good educators, as they are also friends of the children they educate."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Kaymakçioglu|first1=Göksu|title="STRONG WE MAKE EACH OTHER": Emma Goldman, The American Aide to Mujeres Libres During the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939|url=http://www.thesis.bilkent.edu.tr/0006075.pdf|access-date=3 December 2015|archive-date=10 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151210213257/http://www.thesis.bilkent.edu.tr/0006075.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref>
Etta Federn's first husband was Max Bruno Kirmsse, a German teacher of children with mental disabilities<ref>{{cite web|title=Max Bruno Kirmsse|url=https://de.wikipedia.org/Max_Kirmsse|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref>. Her second husband was Peter Paul Kohlhaas, an illustrator.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kröger|first1=Marianne|title="Jüdische Ethik" und Anarchismus im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg|date=2009|publisher=Peter Lang|page=166|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref> She had two sons, Hans and Michael. Her older son, a member of the ], was murdered by French collaborators in 1944.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Shadow of Mart|url=http://www.dagerman.us/writings/plays/the-shadow-of-mart|website=Stig Dagerman, Swedish Writer and Journalist (1923-1954)|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref><ref name=LFC>{{cite web|title=Allemagne, Espagne, France… le long combat pour la liberté d’Etta Federn|url=http://www.lafeuillecharbinoise.com/?p=11267|website=La Feuille Charbinoise|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref>


In 1938, toward the end of the ], as ]'s fascists bombed Barcelona and defeated the Republicans, she fled to France. There, hunted by the Gestapo as a Jew and member of the ], she survived World War II in hiding in Lyon, at times in a monastery, and did translation work for the French Resistance.<ref name=LFC/> She was held in internment camps as a foreign refugee.<ref>{{cite book|editor-last1=Kröger|editor-first1=Marianne|title=Etta Federn: Revolutionär auf ihre Art: Von Angelica Balabanoff bis Madame Roland, 12 Skizzen unkonventioneller Frauen (Etta Federn: Revolutionary in Her Way: From Angelica Balabanoff to Madame Roland, 12 Sketches of Unconventional Women)|date=1997|publisher=Psychosozial-Verlag}}</ref>
== Career ==
]


== Personal life and death ==
In Vienna and Berlin, Etta Federn studied literary history, German philology and Greek.<ref name="Bio">{{cite book|last1=Wininger|first1=Salomon|title=Grosse Jüdische National-Biographie|section=Federn-Kohlhaas, Etta|date=1935|page=494|accessdate=4 December 2015}}</ref> She worked in many genres, publishing articles, biographies, literary studies, poems, and a novel. As a journalist, she was a literary critic for the ]. She wrote biographies of ] and ] (the wife of ]).<ref name=Bio/> In 1927, she published a biography of ], the liberal Jewish Foreign Minister of Germany, who had been assassinated in 1922 by anti-Semitic right-wing terrorists. This book made her the target of Nazi death threats.<ref name=Libcom/>
Etta Federn's first husband was Max Bruno Kirmsse, who taught children with mental disabilities. Her second husband was Peter Paul Kohlhaas, an illustrator.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kröger|first1=Marianne|title="Jüdische Ethik" und Anarchismus im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg|date=2009|publisher=Peter Lang|page=166}}</ref> She had two sons, Hans and Michael, one from each marriage. Her older son, known as Capitaine Jean in the ], was murdered by French collaborators in 1944.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Shadow of Mart|url=http://www.dagerman.us/writings/plays/the-shadow-of-mart|website=Stig Dagerman, Swedish Writer and Journalist (1923–1954)|access-date=3 December 2015|archive-date=8 December 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201208154745/http://dagerman.us/writings/plays/the-shadow-of-mart|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=LFC>{{cite web|title=Allemagne, Espagne, France… le long combat pour la liberté d'Etta Federn|url=http://www.lafeuillecharbinoise.com/?p=11267|website=La Feuille Charbinoise|access-date=3 December 2015}}</ref>


She spent her final years in Paris, supported in part by her relatives in the USA and doing palm readings based on her psychological insights. Because her son was killed as a Resistance fighter, she was awarded French citizenship.<ref name=":0" /> After many years of ill health, exhaustion, and grief over the death of her older son, she died in Paris in 1951.
During the 1920s, Federn became part of a circle of anarchists, including ], ], ], ], and ] Rocker, who would become her close friend.<ref>{{cite web|title=Etta Federn|url=http://ita.anarchopedia.org/Etta_Federn|website=Anarcopedia|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref><ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title = Etta Federn — eine jüdisch-libertäre Pionierin « Bücher – nicht nur zum Judentum|url = http://buecher.hagalil.com/2009/06/etta-federn/|website = buecher.hagalil.com|accessdate = 2015-12-03}}</ref> She contributed to various anarchist newspapers and journals related to the ].<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|title = etta federn (1883-1951) und die mujeres libres {{!}} gwr 225 {{!}} januar 1998|url = http://www.graswurzel.net/225/federn.shtml|website = www.graswurzel.net|accessdate = 2015-12-03}}</ref>


== Legacy ==
In Berlin, Federn also encountered several Polish-born Jewish poets who wrote in Yiddish. In 1931, her translation of the poetry collection ''Fischerdorf'' (Fishing Village) by ] was reviewed favorably by ], who admired Stencl's "passionate poetic emotion."<ref>{{cite web|last1=Valencia|first1=Heather|title=Stencl's Berlin Period|url=http://yiddish.haifa.ac.il/tmr/tmr07/tmr07004.htm|accessdate=4 December 2015}}</ref>
The story of Etta Federn and her unequal love for her two sons inspired ]'s 1948 play ''Skuggan av Mart'' (Marty's Shadow).<ref>{{cite web|title=The Shadow of Mart|url=http://www.dagerman.us/writings/plays/the-shadow-of-mart|website=Stig Dagerman, Swedish Writer and Journalist (1923–1954)|access-date=22 September 2016|archive-date=8 December 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201208154745/http://dagerman.us/writings/plays/the-shadow-of-mart|url-status=dead}}</ref> Dagerman was one of Sweden's leading authors at that time. The play he based loosely on Federn was first performed at the ] in Stockholm, and has since been performed in many countries, including Ireland, the Netherlands, Cyprus, and France. ''Marty's Shadow'' was first performed in New York in 2017, by the ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Stig Dagerman's 'Marty's Shadow'|url=http://www.nybooks.com/event/stig-dagerman-martys-shadow/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170317054658/http://www.nybooks.com/event/stig-dagerman-martys-shadow/|access-date=16 March 2017|archive-date=2017-03-17}}</ref>


== Selected books by Etta Federn ==
In 1932, she left Berlin, realizing that under the Nazis she would no longer be able to publish her writings. She moved with her sons to Barcelona, Spain, where she joined the anarchist movement ] (Free Women). She learned Spanish and became director of four progressive schools in the city of Blanes, educating both teachers and children in secular values and antimilitarism.<ref name=Libcom/> Starting in 1936, she also published a number of articles in the movement's women-run magazine, ''Mujeres Libres''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ackelsberg|first1=Martha|title=Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women|date=2005|publisher=AK Press|pages=266-268|accessdate=4 December 2015}}</ref> Like many anarchist women, she believed in the importance of literacy for women, in birth control and sexual freedom,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Herzog|first1=Dagmar|title=Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History|date=2011|publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=51|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref> and in the power of educated women to be good mothers. She wrote: “Educated mothers relate their own experiences and sufferings to their children; they intuitively understand their feelings and expressions. They are good educators, as they are also friends of the children they educate.”<ref>{{cite web|last1=Kaymakçioglu|first1=Göksu|title=“STRONG WE MAKE EACH OTHER”: EMMA GOLDMAN, THE AMERICAN AIDE TO MUJERES LIBRES DURING THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR, 1936-1939|url=http://www.thesis.bilkent.edu.tr/0006075.pdf|accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref>
* {{Cite book|title=Christiane von Goethe: Ein Beitrag zur Psychologie Goethes (Christiane von Goethe: A Contribution to Goethe's Psychology)|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HxkPAAAAIAAJ| year=1916 |location=Munich |publisher=Delphin}}

* {{Cite book |title=Friedrich Hebbel |year=1920 |location=Munich |publisher=Delphin}}
In 1938, as ]'s fascists bombed Barcelona and defeated the left, Federn fled to France, where she spent time in internment camps as a foreign refugee. She spent the war in hiding in Lyon, at times in a monastery, and did translation work for the French Resistance.<ref name=LFC/> She spent her final years in Paris, supported in part by her relatives in the USA. She was awarded French nationality, since her son had been killed as a Resistance fighter. <ref name=":0" />
* {{Cite book|title=Goethe: Sein Leben der reifenden Jugend erzählt. (Goethe: His Life Story for Young Adults) |location=Stuttgart| publisher=Union Deutsche Verlagsgesellschaft | year=1922}}

* {{Cite book|title=Dante: Ein Erlebnis für werdende Menschen (Dante: An Experience for the Expecant)|location=Stuttgart |publisher=Union Deutsche Verlagsgesellschaft|year=1923|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ki4zvwEACAAJ}}
== Further reading ==
* {{cite book|title=Goethes Faust |date=1927 |publisher=Berlin: Horodisch & Marx |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mPVAHwonm-wC&q=goethes+faust+federn}}
* Marianne Kröger: ''Etta Federn (1883–1951): Befreiende Dichtung und libertäre Pädagogik'', in: ; (Ed.): ''Deutsche Kultur - jüdische Ethik<span>&nbsp;</span>: abgebrochene Lebenswege deutsch-jüdischer Schriftsteller nach 1933''. Frankfurt<span>&nbsp;</span>: Campus, 2011, pp. 115–140.
* {{Cite book |title=Walther Rathenau: Sein Leben und Wirken (Walther Rathenau: His Life and Work) |year=1927 |location=Dresden |publisher=Reissner |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pR3xvQEACAAJ}}
* Marianne Kröger: ''"Jüdische Ethik" und Anarchismus im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg: Simone Weil - Carl Einstein - Etta Federn'', Peter Lang, 2009.
* {{Cite book|title=Mujeres de las revoluciones (Revolutionary Women)|year=1936 |location=Barcelona |publisher=Mujeres libres|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nW9TuAAACAAJ}} Reissued in German as ''Etta Federn: Revolutionär auf ihre Art, von Angelica Balabanoff bis Madame Roland, 12 Skizzen unkonventioneller Frauen'' (Etta Federn: Revolutionary in her Way: From Angelica Balabanoff to Madame Roland, 12 Sketches of Unconventional Women), edited and translated by Marianne Kröger, 1997.
* Martha Ackelsberg: ''Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women'', AK Press, 2005.
* Rosita Anna Ernst: ''Die Familie Federn im Wandel der Zeit - Eine biographische und werksgeschichtliche Analyse einer psychoanalytisch orientierten Familie,'' GRIN Verlag, 2008.

== Biographies ==
* ''Christiane von Goethe: ein Beitrag zur Psychologie Goethes'' (Christiane von Goethe: A Contribution to Goethe's Psychology), 1916.
* ''Dante. Ein Erlebnis für werdende Menschen'' (Dante: An Experience for the Expectant), 1923.
* ''Walther Rathenau: Sein Leben und Wirken'' (Walter Rathenau, His Life and Work), 1928.
* ''Mujeres de la Revoluciones'' (Revolutionary Women), 1937. Reissued in German as ''Etta Federn: Revolutionär auf ihre Art,'' edited and translated by Marianne Kröger, 1997.


== Translations== == Translations==
* ''H.C. Andersens Märchen'', Tales of Hans Christian Andersen, translated from the Danish, 1923. Reissued 1952. * ''H.C. Andersens Märchen'', Tales of ], translated from the Danish, 1923. Reissued 1952.
* ''Shakespeare-Lieder'', Sonnets of William Shakespeare, translated from the English, 1925. * ''Shakespeare-Lieder'', Sonnets of ], translated from the English, 1925.
* ''Wege der liebe : drei Erzählungen'' (The Ways of Love: Three Stories), by Alexandra Kollontai, translated from the Russian, 1925. Reissued 1982. * ''Wege der liebe : drei Erzählungen'' (The Ways of Love: Three Stories), by ], translated from the Russian, 1925. Reissued 1982.
* ''Gesichte'', Poems of Samuel Lewin, translated from the Yiddish, 1928. * ''Gesichte'', Poems of Samuel Lewin, translated from the Yiddish, 1928.
* ''Fischerdorf'' (Fishing Village), Poems of A. N. Stencl, translated from the Yiddish, 1931. * '''' (Fishing Village), Poems of ], translated from the Yiddish, 1931.
* ''Sturm der Revolution'' (The Storm of Revolution), Poems of Soumyendranath Tagore, translated from the Bengali, 1931. * ''Sturm der Revolution'' (The Storm of Revolution), Poems of ], translated from the Bengali, 1931.
* ''Anakreon'', Poems of Anacreon, translated from the Ancient Greek, 1935. * ''Anakreon'', Poems of ], translated from the Ancient Greek, 1935.


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}} {{Reflist|30em}}

== Further reading ==
* Marianne Kröger: ''Etta Federn (1883–1951): Befreiende Dichtung und libertäre Pädagogik'' in ''Deutsche Kultur−jüdische Ethik&nbsp;: abgebrochene Lebenswege deutsch-jüdischer Schriftsteller nach 1933'' (German Culture−Jewish Ethics: Broken Life-paths of German-Jewish writers after 1933), edited by Renate Heuer and Ludger Heid, Frankfurt: Campus, 2011. pp.&nbsp;115–140.
* Marianne Kröger: ''"Jüdische Ethik" und Anarchismus im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg: Simone Weil−Carl Einstein−Etta Federn'' ("Jewish Ethics" and Anarchism in the Spanish Civil War: ]−]−Etta Federn), Peter Lang, 2009.
* Martha Ackelsberg: '']'', AK Press, 2005.
* Lo Dagerman and Nancy Pick: (The Shadows We Bear: Stig Dagerman Meets Etta Federn in Paris, 1947), Norstedts, Sweden, 2017. Also published in France as , Maurice Nadeau, 2018. Also published in the U.S. in 2019, as ''


== Weblinks == == External links ==
{{Normdaten|TYP = p|GND = 116427124|LCCN = nb/2008/17981|VIAF = 93161966}} * {{in lang|de}}
* {{in lang|sv}}
* {{in lang|fr}}
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Latest revision as of 04:38, 14 December 2024

Etta Federn
Etta Federn in Barcelona, 1934Etta Federn in Barcelona, 1934
BornApril 28, 1883
Vienna, Austria
DiedMay 9, 1951(1951-05-09) (aged 68)
Paris, France
Pen nameEtta Federn-Kohlhaas, Marietta Federn, Etta Federn-Kirmsse, Esperanza
OccupationWriter, translator
GenresLiterary biography, women's history
Part of a series on
Anarcha-feminism
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Etta Federn-Kohlhaas (April 28, 1883 – May 9, 1951) or Marietta Federn, also published as Etta Federn-Kirmsse and Esperanza, was a writer, translator, educator and important woman of letters in pre-war Germany. In the 1920s and 1930s, she was active in the anarcho-syndicalist movement in Germany and Spain.

Early life and education

She born in Vienna, Austria, to a distinguished Jewish family. Her mother, Ernestine Federn, was a member of the women's suffrage movement in Austria. Her father, Salomon Federn, was a prominent doctor and pioneer in the monitoring of blood pressure. Her paternal grandfather Elias Bunzelfedern was a well-known liberal rabbi in Prague.

Her sister Else was a social worker in Vienna, active in the Settlement Movement. A park in Vienna was named for her in 2013.

Her brother Paul was a psychoanalyst and, with colleague Alfred Adler a follower of Sigmund Freud. An expert on ego psychology and the treatment of psychosis, he served as vice president of the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society.

In Vienna and Berlin, Etta Federn studied literary history, German philology and Ancient Greek.

Career

Federn moved to Berlin in 1905, where she became a literary critic, translator, novelist and biographer. She worked in many genres, publishing articles, biographies, literary studies and poetry. She published 23 books in Germany, among them translations from the Danish, Russian, Bengali, Ancient Greek, Yiddish and English. She also published two books while living in Spain. She also wrote a young adult novel, Ein Sonnenjahr (A Year of Sun), as well as an adult novel that remained unpublished.

The Image of Woman by Etta Federn, 1917

As a journalist, she was a literary critic for the Berliner Tageblatt, an influential liberal newspaper. She wrote biographies of Dante Alighieri and Christiane Vulpius (wife of Johann von Goethe). In 1927, she published a biography of Walther Rathenau, the liberal Jewish Foreign Minister of Germany, who had been assassinated in 1922 by anti-Semitic right-wing terrorists. Her biography was reviewed by Gabriele Reuter for the New York Times, which called Federn's account "amazingly lucid and precise" and said it "gives a beautifully clear idea of life." Following the book’s publication, Federn became the target of Nazi death threats.

During the 1920s, Federn became part of a circle of anarchists, including Rudolf Rocker, Mollie Steimer, Senya Fleshin, Emma Goldman, and Milly Witkop Rocker, who would become her close friend. She contributed to various anarchist newspapers and journals related to the Free Workers' Union of Germany.

In 1927, her book Goethe's Faust received a favorable review in the New York Times, again by Gabriele Reuter. who wrote that the "simple, objectively written little book is to be recommended particularly to foreigners and young people," demystifying Faust by viewing it as Goethe's "spiritual and intellectual autobiography."

In Berlin, Federn also met and translated several Polish-born Jewish poets who wrote in Yiddish. In 1931, her translation of the Yiddish poetry collection Fischerdorf (Fishing Village) by Abraham Nahum Stencl was published. Thomas Mann gave the book a favorable review, admiring Stencl's "passionate poetic emotion." (The work would soon be destroyed in the Nazi book burnings).

In 1932, Federn left Berlin, realizing that under the Nazis she would no longer be able to publish her writing. She moved with her sons to Barcelona, Spain, where she joined the anarchist movement Mujeres Libres (Free Women), which provided such services as maternity centers, daycare centers, and literacy training to women. She learned Spanish and became director of four progressive schools in the city of Blanes, educating both teachers and children in secular values and antimilitarism. In 1934, she was interviewed in the magazine La Mirador about a controversy concerning her palm reading, an art she had practiced for many years, and whether it contributed to the suicide of a young man in Barcelona. She denied that her palm reading had any connection.

Starting in 1936, she published articles in the movement's women-run anarcha-feminist magazine, also called Mujeres Libres. All issues of the magazine, known for its passionate writing and sophisticated design, can be viewed at La revista Mujeres Libres.

Like many anarchist women, Etta Federn believed in the importance of literacy for women, in birth control and sexual freedom, and in the power of educated women to be good mothers. She wrote: "Educated mothers relate their own experiences and sufferings to their children; they intuitively understand their feelings and expressions. They are good educators, as they are also friends of the children they educate."

In 1938, toward the end of the Spanish Civil War, as Francisco Franco's fascists bombed Barcelona and defeated the Republicans, she fled to France. There, hunted by the Gestapo as a Jew and member of the French Resistance, she survived World War II in hiding in Lyon, at times in a monastery, and did translation work for the French Resistance. She was held in internment camps as a foreign refugee.

Portrait of Etta Federn in Paris, ca. 1947

Personal life and death

Etta Federn's first husband was Max Bruno Kirmsse, who taught children with mental disabilities. Her second husband was Peter Paul Kohlhaas, an illustrator. She had two sons, Hans and Michael, one from each marriage. Her older son, known as Capitaine Jean in the French Resistance, was murdered by French collaborators in 1944.

She spent her final years in Paris, supported in part by her relatives in the USA and doing palm readings based on her psychological insights. Because her son was killed as a Resistance fighter, she was awarded French citizenship. After many years of ill health, exhaustion, and grief over the death of her older son, she died in Paris in 1951.

Legacy

The story of Etta Federn and her unequal love for her two sons inspired Stig Dagerman's 1948 play Skuggan av Mart (Marty's Shadow). Dagerman was one of Sweden's leading authors at that time. The play he based loosely on Federn was first performed at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm, and has since been performed in many countries, including Ireland, the Netherlands, Cyprus, and France. Marty's Shadow was first performed in New York in 2017, by the August Strindberg Repertory Theatre.

Selected books by Etta Federn

Translations

  • H.C. Andersens Märchen, Tales of Hans Christian Andersen, translated from the Danish, 1923. Reissued 1952.
  • Shakespeare-Lieder, Sonnets of William Shakespeare, translated from the English, 1925.
  • Wege der liebe : drei Erzählungen (The Ways of Love: Three Stories), by Alexandra Kollontai, translated from the Russian, 1925. Reissued 1982.
  • Gesichte, Poems of Samuel Lewin, translated from the Yiddish, 1928.
  • Fischerdorf (Fishing Village), Poems of A. N. Stencl, translated from the Yiddish, 1931.
  • Sturm der Revolution (The Storm of Revolution), Poems of Saumyendranath Tagore, translated from the Bengali, 1931.
  • Anakreon, Poems of Anacreon, translated from the Ancient Greek, 1935.

References

  1. "ARIADNE – Projekt "Frauen in Bewegung" – Etta Federn, online bibliography". www.onb.ac.at. Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
  2. ^ Wininger, Salomon (1935). "Federn-Kohlhaas, Etta". Grosse Jüdische National-Biographie. p. 494.
  3. "Federn, Joseph Salomon". Austria-Forum. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  4. Ernst, Rosita Anna (2008). Die Familie Federn im Wandel der Zeit – Eine biographische und werksgeschichtliche Analyse einer psychoanalytisch orientierten Familie. GRIN. pp. 33–35.
  5. Alexander, Franz (1966). Psychoanalytic Pioneers. New York: Basic Books. p. 143.
  6. Rastl, Charlotte. "Else Federn". Unlearned Lessons. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  7. "Queer Places: Else-Federn-Park". Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  8. Alexander, Franz; Grotjahn, Martin; Eisenstein, Samuel (1995). Psychoanalytic Pioneers. Transaction Publishers. p. 156.
  9. Reuter, Gabriele (20 November 1927). "Rathenau in a New German Biography". New York Times. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  10. ^ Heath, Nick. "Federn, Marietta aka Etta 1883–1951". Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  11. "Etta Federn". Anarcopedia. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  12. ^ "Etta Federn — eine jüdisch-libertäre Pionierin « Bücher – nicht nur zum Judentum". buecher.hagalil.com. 17 June 2009. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
  13. "Etta Federn (1883–1951) und die Mujeres Libres | gwr 225 | januar 1998". www.graswurzel.net. Retrieved 2015-12-03.
  14. Reuter, Gabriele (May 8, 1927). "Sin and Atonement in a German Novel" (PDF). Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  15. Valencia, Heather. "Stencl's Berlin Period". Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  16. Brachfeld, Oliver (August 2, 1934). "La Señora Etta Federn". Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  17. Ackelsberg, Martha (2005). Free Women of Spain: Anarchism and the Struggle for the Emancipation of Women. AK Press. pp. 266–268. ISBN 9781902593968.
  18. Herzog, Dagmar (2011). Sexuality in Europe: A Twentieth-Century History. Cambridge University Press. p. 51.
  19. Kaymakçioglu, Göksu. ""STRONG WE MAKE EACH OTHER": Emma Goldman, The American Aide to Mujeres Libres During the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 December 2015. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  20. ^ "Allemagne, Espagne, France… le long combat pour la liberté d'Etta Federn". La Feuille Charbinoise. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  21. Kröger, Marianne, ed. (1997). Etta Federn: Revolutionär auf ihre Art: Von Angelica Balabanoff bis Madame Roland, 12 Skizzen unkonventioneller Frauen (Etta Federn: Revolutionary in Her Way: From Angelica Balabanoff to Madame Roland, 12 Sketches of Unconventional Women). Psychosozial-Verlag.
  22. Kröger, Marianne (2009). "Jüdische Ethik" und Anarchismus im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg. Peter Lang. p. 166.
  23. "The Shadow of Mart". Stig Dagerman, Swedish Writer and Journalist (1923–1954). Archived from the original on 8 December 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  24. "The Shadow of Mart". Stig Dagerman, Swedish Writer and Journalist (1923–1954). Archived from the original on 8 December 2020. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  25. "Stig Dagerman's 'Marty's Shadow'". Archived from the original on 2017-03-17. Retrieved 16 March 2017.

Further reading

External links

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