Grete Meisel-Hess

Grete Meisel-Hess (18 April 1879, Prague - 18 April 1922, Berlin) was an Austrian Jewish feminist, who wrote novels, short stories and essays about women's need for sexual liberation.

Grete Meisel-Hess

Meisel-Hess lived in Vienna from 1893 to 1908. She viewed both anti-Semitism and anti-feminism as signs of degeneration which needed to be overcome by progressive politics.[1]

She wrote for Franz Pfemfert's journal Die Aktion.[2]

Works

  • Die sexuelle Krise. Eine sozialpsychologische Untersuchung, 1909. Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul as The sexual crisis: a critique of our sex life, 1917.
  • Die Intellektuellen [The Intellectuals], 1911
  • Sexuelle Rechte, 1914
  • Betrachtungen zur Frauenfrage, 1914
  • Die Bedeutung der Monogamie, 1916
gollark: Must names be globally unique, though?
gollark: I believe it's getting slightly hotter over time.
gollark: Oookay.
gollark: Wait, how would you know about stupidly expensive FTL travel for thousands of years before you had even figured out what the speed of light was?
gollark: There may also be different stuff produced in each system, or at least some stuff produced more cheaply in some.

References

  1. Alison Rose, Jewish women in fin de siècle Vienna, University of Texas Press, 2008, p. 100
  2. Kevin Repp, '"Sexualcrise und Rasse": Feminist Eugenics at the Fin de Siècle', in Suzanne L. Marchand, David F. Lindenfeld, Germany at the fin de siècle: culture, politics, and ideas, p. 102


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