Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Etta_Federn> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 89 of
89
with 100 triples per page.
- Etta_Federn abstract "Etta Federn-Kohlhaas (April 28, 1883 – May 9, 1951) or Marietta Federn, also published as Etta Federn-Kirmsse and Esperanza, was a writer, translator and educator and important woman of letters in Germany. In the 1920s and 1930s, she was active in the Anarcho-Syndicalism movement in Germany and Spain.Raised in Vienna, she moved in 1905 to Berlin, where she became a literary critic, translator, novelist and biographer. In 1932, as the Nazis rose to power, she moved to Barcelona, where she joined the anarchist-feminist group Mujeres Libres, (Free Women), becoming a writer and educator for the movement. In 1938, toward the end of the Spanish Civil War, she fled to France. There, hunted by the Gestapo as a Jew and a supporter of the French Resistance, she survived World War II in hiding.In Germany, she published 23 books, among them translations from the Danish, Russian, Bengali, Ancient Greek, Yiddish and English. She also published two books while living in Spain.The story of Etta Federn and her two sons inspired the 1948 play Skuggan av Mart (Marty's Shadow) by Swedish writer Stig Dagerman. In 2015, the play had a staged reading in English translation in New York City.".
- Etta_Federn birthDate "1883-04-28".
- Etta_Federn deathDate "1951-05-09".
- Etta_Federn pseudonym "Etta Federn-Kohlhaas, Marietta Federn, Etta Federn-Kirmsse, Esperanza".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageExternalLink bio_federnetta.htm.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageExternalLink Ludger_Heid.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageExternalLink Renate_Heuer.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageID "48709036".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageLength "12594".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageRevisionID "704588061".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Abraham_Nahum_Stencl.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Anarcho-syndicalism.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Berliner_Tageblatt.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:1883_births.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:1951_deaths.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anarcha-feminists.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anarchism_in_Spain.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anarcho-syndicalists.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Austrian_feminists.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Austrian_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_writers.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_who_emigrated_to_escape_Nazism.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Christiane_Vulpius.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Dante_Alighieri.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Emma_Goldman.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink File:Das_Bild_des_Weibes_(The_Image_of_Woman),_by_Etta_Federn,_1917.jpg.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Francisco_Franco.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Free_Workers_Union_of_Germany.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink French_Resistance.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Wolfgang_von_Goethe.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Milly_Witkop.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Mollie_Steimer.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Mujeres_Libres.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Federn.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Rudolf_Rocker.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Senya_Fleshin.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Sigmund_Freud.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_Civil_War.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Stig_Dagerman.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Mann.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageWikiLink Walther_Rathenau.
- Etta_Federn birthDate "1883-04-28".
- Etta_Federn birthPlace "Vienna, Austria".
- Etta_Federn caption "Federn in Barcelona, 1934".
- Etta_Federn deathDate "1951-05-09".
- Etta_Federn deathPlace "Paris, France".
- Etta_Federn genres "Literary biography, women's history".
- Etta_Federn name "Etta Federn".
- Etta_Federn occupation "Writer, translator".
- Etta_Federn pseudonym "Etta Federn-Kohlhaas, Marietta Federn, Etta Federn-Kirmsse, Esperanza".
- Etta_Federn wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Authority_control.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:De_icon.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Death_date_and_age.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_writer.
- Etta_Federn wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:1883_births.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:1951_deaths.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:20th-century_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Anarcha-feminists.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Anarchism_in_Spain.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Anarcho-syndicalists.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Austrian_feminists.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Austrian_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Jewish_women_writers.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:Jewish_writers.
- Etta_Federn subject Category:People_who_emigrated_to_escape_Nazism.
- Etta_Federn hypernym Writer.
- Etta_Federn type Agent.
- Etta_Federn type Person.
- Etta_Federn type Writer.
- Etta_Federn type Person.
- Etta_Federn type Agent.
- Etta_Federn type NaturalPerson.
- Etta_Federn type Thing.
- Etta_Federn type Q215627.
- Etta_Federn type Q36180.
- Etta_Federn type Q5.
- Etta_Federn type Person.
- Etta_Federn comment "Etta Federn-Kohlhaas (April 28, 1883 – May 9, 1951) or Marietta Federn, also published as Etta Federn-Kirmsse and Esperanza, was a writer, translator and educator and important woman of letters in Germany. In the 1920s and 1930s, she was active in the Anarcho-Syndicalism movement in Germany and Spain.Raised in Vienna, she moved in 1905 to Berlin, where she became a literary critic, translator, novelist and biographer.".
- Etta_Federn label "Etta Federn".
- Etta_Federn sameAs Q1371711.
- Etta_Federn sameAs Etta_Federn-Kohlhaas.
- Etta_Federn sameAs Q1371711.
- Etta_Federn wasDerivedFrom Etta_Federn?oldid=704588061.
- Etta_Federn isPrimaryTopicOf Etta_Federn.
- Etta_Federn name "Etta Federn".