Claudia von Werlhof | |
---|---|
Born | Stahnsdorf, Berlin, Germany | 17 May 1943
Occupation(s) | Sociologist and political scientist |
Claudia von Werlhof (born 17 May 1943 in Stahnsdorf [1] ) is a German sociologist and political scientist. She held the first professorship for women's studies in Austria, based at the Institute for Political Science at the University of Innsbruck.
After graduating from high school in Cologne in 1963, Werlhof studied economics and sociology in Cologne and Hamburg. In 1968, she received her Diplom in economics and sociology. From 1968 to 70, she was awarded a doctoral scholarship from the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung in El Salvador and Costa Rica. In 1974, she received her doctorate in sociology at the University of Cologne. In 1974/75 she was a lecturer at the Department of Social Sciences at the University of Frankfurt am Main. From 1977 to 79, she did research in Venezuela.
From 1975 to 1986, Werlhof worked as a research assistant at the Faculty of Sociology at Bielefeld University with a focus on development policy, where she helped to establish the practice area Women and Third World together with Veronika Bennholdt-Thomsen (de). In 1984, Werlhof habilitated in political science at the University of Frankfurt with a thesis on the woman question and agriculture policy in the Third World. She was a lecturer and visiting professor at various universities in Germany and abroad. In 1988, she was appointed full professor of Austrian political studies with a special focus on women's studies at the Institute for Political Science of the Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences at the University of Innsbruck. This was the first professorship for women's studies in Austria. Werlhof retired in 2011. [2]
Claudia von Werlhof is the mother of a son. [3]
Claudia von Werlhof was involved in the women's movement from the very beginning. She is considered a co-founder of women's studies in the Federal Republic of Germany. Her research and publications have dealt with the theoretical and political questions of the women's movement and feminist theory.
Together with Maria Mies and Veronika Bennholdt-Thomsen, she is a co-founder of ecofeminism and developed the feminist Bielefeld subsistence perspective, which took up the subsistence approach of Georg Elwert et al. and emphasized that subsistence production is not only an important component in developing countries, but also plays a major role in capitalist Societies of the Center: the domestic work of women reduces the reproductive costs of the male wage worker and thus subsidizes the capitalist sector. [4] They thus linked the debate on domestic work that was conducted in the women's movement in the 1980s, with the women's question, the Third World question, and later the ecological question, [5] and also refuted in empirical studies that subsistence producers in the Third World were gradually becoming wage workers. Instead, they argued, work was being pushed back into the domestic sphere, where women produce for low wages for the world market. The sociologists in Bielefeld called this process housewife-making. [4] They analysed that subsistence production, which serves the immediate creation and maintenance of life, is subject to a constant social devaluation process, which, according to Werlhof, is linked to the modern understanding of nature and is not gender-neutral. Subsistence economy as the creation of the basis of life not only would not disappear in traditional societies, but would be subordinated to the capitalist commodity economy. The devaluation of subsistence would go hand in hand with the devaluation of the people associated with it. Werlhof and her comrades-in-arms saw their approach as a critical theory of society; at the same time, they were concerned with changing this reality. Through subsistence perspective, they analyzed regionalization and appreciation of the subsistence-oriented supply economy even under globalized conditions, and thus the strengthening of women as subsistence producers. Per the authors, in the subsistence economy, there could also be money, trade and markets. "With its specific methodological reference, this approach opened the field for an international perspective of feminist research, which takes into account the residents of the Cologne women's shelter as well as Venezuelan peasant women or Indian homeworkers. [6] The Bielefeld subsistence perspective was further developed within and outside of scientific research, various groups and initiatives related to it, which led to the founding of the Institut für Theorie und Praxis der Subsistenz e.V. in Bielefeld in 1995. [7]
Controversial debates about the subsistence approach were sparked in the women's movement. The social education worker Iman Attia, for example, accused eco-feminism and Werlhof's and her fellow campaigners' perspective on subsistence of mythologizing the housewife and mother, which only intensified the oppression they were trying to fight. [8] The authors' emphasis on the female subsistence economy stands in contrast to emancipation through participation in gainful employment, [9] which for von Werlhof and other representatives of the critical theory of patriarchy will not lead to emancipation but only to the perpetuation of patriarchal power relations. This also results in a contradiction between the classical women's studies represented by von Werlhof and the more recent approach of gender studies. [10]
In further research work and publications, Claudia von Werlhof focused on criticism of globalization and civil society alternatives to globalization, which she describes as dissidence, and condensed them into a "theory-practice approach of a critical theory of patriarchy." [11] In 2007 she founded the association FIPAZ (Research Institute for Patriarchal Criticism and Alternative Civilizations) and in 2010 the association Planetare Bewegung für Mutter Erde (Planetary Movement for Mother Earth). [1]
In February 2010, von Werlhof came under criticism when she brought up a conspiracy theory in an interview with Der Standard . According to this theory, the United States had a technology to trigger artificial earthquakes using HAARP, and the 2010 Haiti earthquake could have been caused by this. [12] [13] [14] [15] Ferdinand Karlhofer, director of the Institute of Political Science at the University of Innsbruck, distanced himself from the conspiracy theory, which lacked any scientific basis, and spoke of "damage" to the Institute's reputation. Werlhof replied in an open letter that she had given an interview "personally and by no means on behalf of the Institute," and as a result, she could not have done any harm to the Institute. She also raised the question whether the "scientific understanding of the institute" was "guided by political interests." [16]
Articles
Herausgeberschaft
Maria Mies is a German professor of sociology and author of several feminist books, including Indian Women and Patriarchy (1980), Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale (1986), and Women: The Last Colony (1988).
Annemarie Minna Renée Schwarzenbach was a Swiss writer, journalist and photographer. Her bisexual mother brought her up in a masculine style, and her androgynous image suited the bohemian Berlin society of the time, in which she indulged enthusiastically. Her anti-Fascist campaigning forced her into exile, where she became close to the family of novelist Thomas Mann. She would live much of her life abroad as a photo-journalist, embarking on many lesbian relationships, and experiencing a growing morphine addiction. In America, the young Carson McCullers was infatuated with Schwarzenbach, to whom she dedicated Reflections in a Golden Eye. Schwarzenbach reported on the early events of World War II, but died of a head injury, following a fall.
Reimar Oltmanns is a well-known journalist and author in Germany.
Claudia Crawford is a German politician of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), who became the youngest cabinet minister in German history whilst in office from 1994–98 and was Federal Minister for family, seniors, women and youth affairs and, by virtue of this office, presided over the European Union Council of Ministers. Nolte is a Catholic and is active in the Catholic community. She is married to investigative journalist David Crawford of CORRECT!V. With her marriage in July 2008, she took the name her husband.
Klaus-Uwe Gerhardt is a German economist, columnist, and author. His scientific work concentrates on labour economics and social policy. He works as economic teacher und scientist. Through several books and articles he contributes to the sociopolitical discourse. Gerhardt was a pioneer in the German debate on Guaranteed minimum income (GMI) in the early 1980s. GMI is a proposed system of social welfare provision that guarantees a basic income for all citizens or families.
Neue Marx-Lektüre or NML is a revival and interpretation of Karl Marx's critique of political economy, which originated during the mid-1960s in both Western and Eastern Europe and opposed both Marxist–Leninist and social democratic interpretations of Marx. Neue Marx-Lektüre covers a loose group of authors mainly from the German-speaking countries who reject certain historizing and empiricist interpretations of Marx's analysis of economic forms, many of which are argued to spring from Friedrich Engels and his role in the early Marxist workers' movement.
Europa regina, Latin for Queen Europe, is the map-like depiction of the European continent as a queen. Made popular in the 16th century, the map shows Europe as a young and graceful woman wearing imperial regalia. The Iberian peninsula (Hispania) is the head, wearing a crown shaped like the Carolingian hoop crown. The Pyrenees, forming the neck, separate the Iberian peninsula from France (Gallia), which makes up the upper chest. The Holy Roman Empire is the centre of the torso, with Bohemia being the heart of the woman. Her long gown stretches to Hungary, Poland, Lithuania, Livonia, Bulgaria, Muscovy, Macedonia and Greece. In her arms, formed by Italy and Denmark, she holds a sceptre and an orb (Sicily). In most depictions, Africa, Asia and the Scandinavian peninsula are partially shown, as are the British Isles, in schematic form.
Gerhard Amendt is a German sociologist, and was Professor at Bremen University, in the Research Institute for Gender and Generation until his retirement in 2003.
Hadayatullah Hübsch was a German author, journalist, poet, political activist of the 68s movement and, following his conversion to Ahmadiyya Islam, long-time spokesman of the Ahmadi Community in Germany. He also served as an Imam of the Noor Mosque in Frankfurt. From 1991 to 1998 he was chairman of the Association of German Writers (VdS) in Hesse and in his last years he worked as a writer in Frankfurt.
Gerhard Albert Ritter was a German historian.
Rebekka Habermas is a German historian, professor of modern history at the University of Göttingen, in Germany. Habermas has made substantial contributions to German social and cultural history of the 19th century.
Ludwig Eiber is a German historian and author. He is widely acknowledged as an expert on the post-World War II Allied war crimes trials of the Nazis. In particular, he has expertise in the Dachau trials.
Helga Hörz is a German Marxist philosopher and Women's rights activist. Before 1990 she was a university teacher of Ethics in the Philosophy Department at the Humboldt University in (East) Berlin. She was persuaded to retire on health grounds in October 1990, but in the words of one headline writer slightly less than twenty years later, this has left her "winding down, but not muzzled".
Karin Flaake is a German sociologist and professor (retired) at the Carl von Ossietzky University Oldenburg. Her publications on the adolescence of young women and men are part of the literature of socio-psychologically oriented gender research. Another focus of her work is on the chances of changing gender relations in families.
Margrit Brückner is a feminist German sociologist and a retired professor of the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences. Her publications on girls and women at work, and, especially, her work on violence against women, have become core academic texts. Another of her more notable specialities involves her contributions to the international debate on (social) care.
Utta Isop is an Austrian philosopher and gender researcher, author and editor. Her main focuses are gender democracy, unconditional basic income, solidarity economy, and social movements.
Inge Hansen-Schaberg is a German educational researcher.
Irene Below is a German woman art historian.
SS-Gefolge was the designation for the female civil servants in the SS during the Era of National Socialism in Nazi Germany. Women were only allowed to serve in the SS in a very limited capacity. The SS Gefolge was not formally a part of the SS. Members of the Gefolge worked in the concentration camps as guards and nurses.
Liliane Weissberg is an American literary scholar and cultural historian specializing in German-Jewish studies and German and American literature. She is currently the Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor in Arts and Sciences and Professor of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvania. She received, among others, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Humboldt Research Award for her research on German-Jewish literature and culture and the Berlin Prize of the American Academy in Berlin, and holds an honorary degree from the University of Graz.