Else Feldmann
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Find sources: "Else Feldmann" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009)
Else Feldmann (25 February 1884 – 1942) was an Austrian writer, playwright, poet, socialist journalist, and victim of the Holocaust.
She grew up in Leopoldstadt as the daughter of poor Jewish parents with her six siblings. She attended college, but after her father lost his job she was forced to leave school to work in a factory. In 1908, she became a contributor to the socialist newspaper Arbeiter-Zeitung and went on to co-found a socialist writers group, Vereinigung sozialistischer Schriftsteller, with Jewish socialist poet Josef Luitpold Stern, communist author, poet, essayist, and songwriter Fritz Brügel, Jewish anarchist and socialist lyricist and poet Theodor Kramer, and early science fiction author Rudolf Brunngraber.[1]
Feldmann was able to develop stories from her articles into novels to reach a wider audience with her socialist message. She began working full-time for the Arbeiter-Zeitung in 1923 until the newspaper, along with other socialist and communist political activity, was forbidden by the austrofascist Fatherland Front Party in 1934. On 14 June 1942 Feldman was captured by the Gestapo and sent to Sobibór extermination camp, where she was murdered.
Books
[edit ]- Lowenzahn: Eine Kindheit
- Liebe ohne Hoffnung
- Der Leib der Mutter
- Martha und Antonia
References
[edit ]- ^ Keepers of the Motherland: German Texts by Jewish Women Writers , Dagmar C.G. Lorenz. 1997.
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- 1884 births
- 1942 deaths
- Austrian women writers
- Austrian women poets
- Austrian Jews who died in the Holocaust
- Austrian people who died in Sobibor extermination camp
- Austrian civilians killed in World War II
- People from Leopoldstadt
- 20th-century Austrian women writers
- 20th-century Austrian writers
- 20th-century Austrian journalists
- Jewish dramatists and playwrights
- Executed journalists
- Austrian writer stubs
- Jewish history stubs