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Fredrika Bremer
Birth: 8-17-1801
Death: 12-31-1865
Biography
"Fredrika Bremer, (born August 17, 1801, Åbo, Swedish Finland [now Turku, Finland]—died December 31, 1865, Årsta, near Stockholm), writer, reformer, and champion of women’s rights; she introduced the domestic novel into Swedish literature. Bremer’s father was a wealthy merchant who settled the family in Sweden when she was three. She was carefully educated and, as a young woman, travelled extensively in Europe. After her father’s death, her private means enabled her to devote her life to social work, travel, and writing. Her quiet domestic novels such as Familjen H*** (1830–31; The H— Family; also translated as The Colonel’s Family), Grannarna (1837; The Neighbours), and Hemmet (1839; The Home) were popular at home and abroad, with English translations produced during her lifetime by the poet Mary Howitt. Bremer visited the United States, where she was welcomed in New England as a kindred spirit for her antislavery sentiments. She met Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Nathaniel Hawthorne and wrote about her impressions in Hemmen i den nya verlden, 3 vol. (1853–54; The Homes of the New World). Her later novels Hertha (1856) and Fader och dotter (1858; Father and Daughter) deal with the social effects of the assertion of women’s rights."
Letter References
Letter from Frances Miller Seward to Lazette Miller Worden, September 7, 1850
Letter from Frances Miller Seward to William Henry Seward, July 28, 1850
Letter from William Henry Seward to Frances Miller Seward, July 20, 1850
Citations
Biography and Citation Information:
Biography:
"Fredrika Bremer, (born August 17, 1801, Åbo, Swedish Finland [now Turku, Finland]—died December 31, 1865, Årsta, near Stockholm), writer, reformer, and champion of women’s rights; she introduced the domestic novel into Swedish literature.
Bremer’s father was a wealthy merchant who settled the family in Sweden when she was three. She was carefully educated and, as a young woman, travelled extensively in Europe. After her father’s death, her private means enabled her to devote her life to social work, travel, and writing. Her quiet domestic novels such as Familjen H*** (1830–31; The H— Family; also translated as The Colonel’s Family), Grannarna (1837; The Neighbours), and Hemmet (1839; The Home) were popular at home and abroad, with English translations produced during her lifetime by the poet Mary Howitt. Bremer visited the United States, where she was welcomed in New England as a kindred spirit for her antislavery sentiments. She met Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and Nathaniel Hawthorne and wrote about her impressions in Hemmen i den nya verlden, 3 vol. (1853–54; The Homes of the New World). Her later novels Hertha (1856) and Fader och dotter (1858; Father and Daughter) deal with the social effects of the assertion of women’s rights."
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https://www.britannica.com/biography/Fredrika-Bremer
Title of Webpage:
Fredrika Bremer
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https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Encyclop%C3%A6dia_Britannica,_Ninth_Edition/Fredrika_Bremer
Title of Webpage:
Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition/Fredrika Bremer
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Citation Type:
Website
Citation URL:
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Fredrika-Bremer
Title of Webpage:
Fredrika Bremer
Website Viewing Date:
Tuesday, May 22, 2018 - 08:45
Website Last Modified Date:
Tuesday, May 22, 2018 - 08:45