Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)

Taking the example of the remarkable political career of Emmy Stradal, a political newcomer at the beginning of the First Austrian Republic who became an active and effective member of the Austrian parliament for the Pan-German People’s Party between 1920 and 1923, this article investigates t...

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Main Author: Johanna Gehmacher
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: StudienVerlag 2015-08-01
Series:Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3582
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spelling doaj-418a4ec91fdd4bbea72dcdbdd32251242021-03-18T20:46:45ZdeuStudienVerlagÖsterreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften1016-765X2707-966X2015-08-0126210.25365/oezg-2015-26-2-6Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)Johanna Gehmacher0Universität Wien, Institut für Zeitgeschichte Taking the example of the remarkable political career of Emmy Stradal, a political newcomer at the beginning of the First Austrian Republic who became an active and effective member of the Austrian parliament for the Pan-German People’s Party between 1920 and 1923, this article investigates the emerging political culture of the country built out of the remains of the Habsburg Empire after 1918. It suggests that, while the whole interwar period has to be seen from the perspective of the destruction of democracy in the 1930s, the early 1920s can also be analysed as a period of opening up and searching for new political forms, as the existing parties had to adjust to both the altered position of the parliament and women’s suffrage. The first part of the paper looks into Emmy Stradal’s personal development as the middle-class wife of a senior government official and mother of four children and investigates her proto-feminist opinions, which were expressed in unpublished literary works and drew heavily on Nietzschean philosophy. The second part focuses on her political career within the Pan-German People’s Party whose racial ideology of the Volksgemeinschaft combined aggressive anti-Semitism with the demand for Austrian union with Germany. It shows how Emmy Stradal tried to build alliances with women from other parties and sought to legitimise her demands for better funding of girl’s education within the context of her party’s anti-Semitic ideology. https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3582Emmy StradalGerman nationalismanti-SemitismPan-German People’s Partygirls’ educationwomen’s movement
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Gehmacher
spellingShingle Johanna Gehmacher
Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
Emmy Stradal
German nationalism
anti-Semitism
Pan-German People’s Party
girls’ education
women’s movement
author_facet Johanna Gehmacher
author_sort Johanna Gehmacher
title Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
title_short Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
title_full Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
title_fullStr Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
title_full_unstemmed Die großdeutsche Politikerin Emmy Stradal (1877–1925)
title_sort die großdeutsche politikerin emmy stradal (1877–1925)
publisher StudienVerlag
series Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften
issn 1016-765X
2707-966X
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Taking the example of the remarkable political career of Emmy Stradal, a political newcomer at the beginning of the First Austrian Republic who became an active and effective member of the Austrian parliament for the Pan-German People’s Party between 1920 and 1923, this article investigates the emerging political culture of the country built out of the remains of the Habsburg Empire after 1918. It suggests that, while the whole interwar period has to be seen from the perspective of the destruction of democracy in the 1930s, the early 1920s can also be analysed as a period of opening up and searching for new political forms, as the existing parties had to adjust to both the altered position of the parliament and women’s suffrage. The first part of the paper looks into Emmy Stradal’s personal development as the middle-class wife of a senior government official and mother of four children and investigates her proto-feminist opinions, which were expressed in unpublished literary works and drew heavily on Nietzschean philosophy. The second part focuses on her political career within the Pan-German People’s Party whose racial ideology of the Volksgemeinschaft combined aggressive anti-Semitism with the demand for Austrian union with Germany. It shows how Emmy Stradal tried to build alliances with women from other parties and sought to legitimise her demands for better funding of girl’s education within the context of her party’s anti-Semitic ideology.
topic Emmy Stradal
German nationalism
anti-Semitism
Pan-German People’s Party
girls’ education
women’s movement
url https://journals.univie.ac.at/index.php/oezg/article/view/3582
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