Rita Bake

Rita Bake (born 16 January 1952) is a German economic and social historian. She has a degree in librarianship and is a prolific author. She was a founder in 2000/2001 of the "Garden of Women" ("Garten der Frauen") at the vast Ohlsdorf Cemetery on the edge of Hamburg.[1][2][3]

Biography

Rita Bake was born in Bremerhaven. She studied for a degree in librarianship at the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences.[4] After that she moved on to the University of Hamburg where she studied Social and Economic History and Folklore along with Early and Pre-History. She concluded this phase of her education with a doctorate. The work for her dissertation concerned women's employment in the manufacturing sector in pre-industrial Germany.[5] Among other roles she worked as a lecturer on the History of Women as part of the Women's Study and Research programme of University of Hamburg.[2] At the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences and at the "Historical seminar" of University of Hamburg she taught "Librarianship and Information".

In 1990 Bake started working in a senior academic and administrative role (als "wissenschaftliche Referentin") at the Hamburg region "Agency for Civic Education" ("Landeszentrale für politische Bildung").[6] She served between 2004 and the end of 2017 as deputy head of the agency.[7] The agency publishes detailed information on social and regional history of Hamburg, also covering politics and political institutions. There has, during Bake's time at the agency, been an increased focus on women's history. The agency also designs and implements historically based city tours and exhibitions.[1][2]

In 2000, with the active help of the historian-politician Silke Urbanski and of the journalist-politician Helga Diercks-Norden, Rita Bake founded the "Garden of Women" ("Garten der Frauen") at Hamburg's Ohlsdorf Cemetery. It is claimed to be only place of its kind in the world. All three women were feminist activists. The "Garden" is a memorial location for significant women, to which historical grave stones can be transferred after heirs and representatives of the deceased are no longer able (or willing) to pay for the upkeep of the grave in its original location. It is also available as a last resting place for significant women who had died since its inception. Since 2000 Rita Bake has served as chair of the (exclusively voluntary) "Garden of Women Association".[8][9] At the time of the project launch Bake was asked about the gender separation implicit in the whole idea: "Are not all people equal, at least in death?". The question was one which Bake had evidently considered already: "Sadly, no. Because the achievements of women are often not adequately valued while they are alive, they will be forgotten even more quickly after death than in the case of men".[3]

Since 2007 she has teamed up with fellow historian Beate Meyer of the "Institute for the History of German Jewry in Hamburg" to head up and work as compiler-editor for the series, "Stolpersteine in the districts of Hamburg".[10] 17 volumes had already appeared by September 2016.[10] In April 2010 this project was celebrated with the awarding of the Lappenberg Medal from the "League for Hamburg History" ("Verein für Hamburgische Geschichte").[11]

In 2012 Rita Bake developed Hamburg's first on-line databank of women's biographies. She continues to feed the databank with additional biographical material.[12] In 2015 she instigated another on-line databank for the city, the so-called "Dabeigewesene Databank" which focuses on the experiences of those who lived through the Hitler years in Hamburg.[13]

Recognition

In 2009 Rita Bake was the winner of "Hammonia 2009", presented by the Hamburg region Women's Council ("Landesfrauenrat") in recognition of her feminist political commitment.[1]


gollark: Yes.
gollark: I might need a way around the "65 As" problem, hm.
gollark: Maybe I should try and sneak LTS technology into open source projects.
gollark: Unrelatedly, are you willing to embrace length-terminated strings in all your code?
gollark: NOT having it?

References

  1. "Hammonia 2009: Dr. Rita Bake" (PDF). Landesfrauenrat Hamburg e.V. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  2. Franklin Kopitzsch; Dirk Brietzke (2001). Rita Bake, geb. 1952. Hamburgische Biografie-Personenlexikon. 6. Wallstein Verlag. p. 457. ISBN 978-3-7672-1366-1.
  3. "Gräber". "Frauen werden schneller vergessen". Der Spiegel (online). 31 July 2000. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  4. Dorothee Bürgi; Petra Rechenberg-Winter (14 May 2014). Dr. phil. Rita Bake. Kunst – dem Leid An-Sehen geben: Leidfaden 2014. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 97. ISBN 978-3-647-80606-8.
  5. Bake, Rita (Verfasser): Vorindustrielle Frauenerwerbsarbeit : Arbeits- u. Lebensweise von Manufakturarbeiterinnen im Deutschland d. 18. Jh. (Hochschulschrift), ISBN 978-3-7609-5177-5
  6. Rita Bake, Helga Kutz-Bauer, Dirk Jörke: Halb so alt wie das Grundgesetz. 25 Jahre Landeszentrale für politische Bildung – eine Chronik. Hamburg 1999, p. 79, ISBN 3-929728-41-9
  7. "Dr. Rita Bake, Stellvertretende Direktorin der Landeszentrale für politische Bildung" (PDF). Jahresbericht .... Personalbestand (2016). Die Landeszentrale für politische Bildung der Freien und Hansestadt Hamburg. p. 7. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  8. "Garten der Frauen e.V." Ein Ort der Erinnerung mit historischen Grabsteinen von Gräbern bedeutender Frauen und eine letzte Ruhestätte für Frauen auf dem Ohlsdorfer Friedhof in Hamburg. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  9. Rita Bake: Der Garten der Frauen. Ein Ort der Erinnerung mit historischen Grabsteinen von Gräbern bedeutender Frauen und eine letzte Ruhestätte für Frauen. Hamburg 2013. ISBN 978-3-00-042176-1
  10. "Biographical search for traces / Projekt biografische Spurensuche (till now - 2018 - only the title has been translated into English!)". Biografien in einer stadtteilbezogenen Buchreihe. Landeszentrale für politische Bildung , Hamburg. 13 February 2018. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  11. Hamburger Abendblatt: Medaille für Hamburger Stolperstein-Projekt. 30 March 2010, accessed 7 August 2017 PAYWALL RESTRICTIONS APPLY
  12. "Hamburger Frauenbiografien". Frauen, die in Hamburg Spuren hinterlassen haben (Datenbank Stand August 2018) Frauen stellen mindestens die Hälfte der Menschheit. Wenn es aber um Erinnerungen geht, sind es immer noch in der Mehrzahl Männer, die die Spitzenplätze einnehmen. hamburg.de GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  13. "Datenbank online Die Dabeigewesenen". Von Hamburger NS-Täter/innen, Profiteuren, Denunziant/innen, Mitläufer/innen und Zuschauer/innen ... Eine Hamburg Topografie. hamburg.de GmbH & Co. KG. Retrieved 30 August 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.