
Alice Rühle-Gerstel (1894-1943) was a prominent German-Jewish feminist-leftist journalist, psychologist, and author during the Weimar Republic. Her works appeared frequently in Germany’s most prominent newspapers and literary-cultural publications. She was forced into exile during the 1930s, first to her birthplace Prague before fleeing to Mexico. Her pieces reflect on the status of the women’s movement during the 1920s and 1930s, politics of the Weimar Republic, and the relationship between labor and gender.
Lessons on Rühle-Gerstel‘s Work
Lessons from Related Themes
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- Heinrich Leopold Wagner, “Die Kindermörderin,” 1775
- Friedrich Wolf, “Cyankali,” 1929 (Part 2)
- Friedrich Wolf, “Cyankali” 1929 (Part 1)
- Ulrike Ottinger, an Introduction to her Art
- Ulrike Ottinger, “Bildnis einer Trinkerin,” 1979
- Selimović and Ronen, Roma Armee, 2017
- Nura, “Fair,” 2021