1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910149599003321

Titolo

Rosa Manus (1881-1942) : the international life and legacy of a Jewish Dutch feminist / / edited by Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, [Massachusetts] : , : Brill, , 2017

©2017

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (495 pages) : illustrations (some color), photographs

Collana

Studies in Jewish History and Culture, , 1568-5004 ; ; Volume 51

Disciplina

305.42092

Soggetti

Feminism - Netherlands

Jewish women - Netherlands

Netherlands Biography

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Preliminary Material -- Introduction: Recovering the Legacy of Rosa Manus / Francisca de Haan -- 1 Rosa Manus: The Genealogy of a Jewish Dutch Feminist / Myriam Everard -- 2 Rosa Manus at the 1915 International Congress of Women in The Hague and Her Involvement in the Early wilpf / Annika Wilmers -- 3 Rosa Manus, Katharina von Kardorff-Oheimb and the Bonds of High-Financial Womanhood / Mineke Bosch -- 4 Global Visions: The Women’s Disarmament Committee (1931–1939) and the International Politics of Disarmament in the 1930s / Karen Garner -- 5 Trying to Stem the Tide: Rosa Manus’s Peace Activism in the 1930s / Ellen Carol DuBois -- 6 Rosa Manus in Cairo, 1935, and Copenhagen, 1939: Encounters with Egyptians / Margot Badran -- 7 Memory Is Power: Rosa Manus, Rosika Schwimmer and the Struggle about Establishing an International Women’s Archive / Dagmar Wernitznig -- 8 Fateful Politics: The Itinerary of Rosa Manus, 1933–1942 / Myriam Everard -- Pictures / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 1 Aletta H. Jacobs and Rosa Manus, “Dear Presidents and Officers,” 1 December 1914 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 2 Rosa Manus, “Personal Reminiscences,” 1919 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 3 Rosa Manus, “Report of the Presentation of Petitions to the Disarmament Conference, Geneva, February 6, 1932” / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 4 Jo van



Ammers-Küller, “Rosa Manus,” 1933 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 5 Rosa Manus to Carrie Chapman Catt, Amsterdam, 22 September 1933 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 6 Suat Derviş, interview with Rosa Manus, 9 April 1935 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 7 Rosa Manus to Jane de Iongh, [Amsterdam] 5 November 1935 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 8 Rosa Manus to B.J.A. de Kanter-van Hettinga Tromp, Brussels, 25 August 1936 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 9 Rosa Manus to Rosa Bodenheimer, Amsterdam, 9 February 1937 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 10 Henriette Polak to Henriette Polak-Schwarz, Ravensbrück, March 1942 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 11 G.C.W. van Tets van Goudriaan to Olive A. Colton, Stockbridge, Mass., 23 July 1942 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 12 Christine Bakker-van Bosse to Margery Corbett Ashby, The Hague, 14 May 1945 / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- 13 Hans van der Meulen, “Third Chapter,” in “Rosa Manus. Nazi victim, compiled by dr Hans van der Meulen,” [1948] / Myriam Everard and Francisca de Haan -- Appendix 1: Rosa Manus—Ancestry -- Appendix 2: Rosa Manus—Chronology -- Appendix 3: Rosa Manus—Bibliography -- Index.

Sommario/riassunto

Rosa Manus (1881–1942) uncovers the life of Dutch feminist and peace activist Rosa Manus, co-founder of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, vice-president of the International Alliance of Women, and founding president of the International Archives for the Women’s Movement (IAV) in Amsterdam, revealing its rootedness in Manus’s radical secular Jewishness. Because the Nazis looted the IAV (1940) including Manus’s large personal archive, and subsequently arrested (1941) and murdered her (1942), Rosa Manus has been almost unknown to later generations. This collective biography offers essays based on new and in-depth research on pictures and documents from her archives, returned to Amsterdam in 2003, as well as other primary sources. It thus restores Manus to the history from which the Nazis attempted to erase her. Contributors include: Margot Badran, Mineke Bosch, Ellen Carol DuBois, Myriam Everard, Karen Garner, Francisca de Haan, Dagmar Wernitznig, and Annika Wilmers.