Swiss suffragette (1869–1940)
Hedwig Bleuler–Waser |
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Born | Sophie Hedwig Waser (1869-12-29)29 December 1869
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Died | 1 February 1940(1940-02-01) (aged 70)
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Nationality | Swiss |
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Education | University of Zurich |
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Spouse |
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Children | 2 |
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Sophie Hedwig Bleuler-Waser (born Sophie Hedwig Waser; 29 December 1869 – 1 February 1940) was a Swiss suffragette who founded the Swiss Federation of Abstinent Women.
Personal life
Bleuler-Waser was born on 29 December 1869 in Zürich.[1] Bleuler-Waser married Swiss psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler.[2] The two met while campaigning for the abstinence movement.[3] The couple did not frequent Church and followed the ideas of the Enlightenment.[4]
Education and career
In 1901 she met Auguste Forel, a Swiss myrmecologist, neuroanatomist, psychiatrist and eugenicist, and at his suggestion, she founded the Swiss Federation of Abstinent Women.[1][5] She chaired the Federation as president until October 1921.[6] Together with her five children, she ran social events at the psychiatric hospital her husband, Dr. Eugen Bleuler, worked at, including serving afternoon tea.[7]
In 1907, Bleuler-Waser graduated from the University of Zurich, becoming one of the few women to receive her doctorate.[8] While at the University of Zurich she established lasting friendships with Marie Baum, Ricarda Huch and Marianne Plehn.[9] After completing her doctorate, she taught at the Höhere Mädchenschule in Zürich.[6]
During World War 1, Bleuler-Waser and Else Züblin were involved in the construction of alcohol-free soldiers' offices.[10] In the winter of 1917, she started women's education courses in Zürich.[1] For most of the time Bleuler was working in Burghölzli, between 1898 and 1927, the family lived together in an apartment outside the clinic. The apartment was also home to a secretary and junior doctor.[4] From 1919 until 1937, she led the German-Swiss Ortsgruppenvereinigung (Local chapter of Association).[1]
Selected publications
The following is a list of selected publications:[11]
- J.G. Lavater (1894)
- Ulrich Hegner: ein Schweizer Kultur- und Charakterbild (1901)
- Weihnachtsspiele (1910)
- Die Dichterschwestern Regula Keller und Betsy Meyer (1919)
- Lenzbub kommt (1920)
- Engelchens Erdenjahr : Weihnachtsspiel in fünf Bildern (1926)
References
External links
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