
audiobook
Anmerkungen zur Transkription:
This compact polemic offers a clear‑cut response to a once‑celebrated but deeply troubling philosophical treatise that declared women inherently inferior. Written in Vienna at the turn of the twentieth century, the author dismantles the pseudo‑scientific arguments with careful citations and a steady, reasoned tone. The introduction frames the debate as more than academic squabbling, portraying it as a moral imperative against the rising tide of anti‑feminist propaganda. By foregrounding the original statements, the work invites listeners to hear each claim and its systematic refutation.
The author balances rigorous scholarship with a palpable urgency, exposing logical contradictions and highlighting how the original ideas weaponize science to justify contempt. Contemporary feminist insights are woven throughout, showing that the struggle against such misogyny has deep roots. Listeners will find the essay both a historical snapshot of Viennese intellectual life and a reminder that critical debate remains essential. Its measured prose makes the complex argument accessible, encouraging reflection on how past prejudices echo in modern discourse.
Full title
Weiberhaß und Weiberverachtung Eine Erwiderung auf die in Dr. Otto Weiningers Buche »Geschlecht und Charakter« geäußerten Anschauungen über »Die Frau und ihre Frage« Eine Erwiderung auf die in Dr. Otto Weiningers Buche »Geschlecht und Charakter« geäußerten Anschauungen über »Die Frau und ihre Frage«
Language
de
Duration
~2 hours (128K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jana Srna and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file made from scans of public domain material at Austrian Literature Online.)
Release date
2010-03-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1879–1922
A bold early feminist voice from Vienna and Berlin, she wrote fiction and essays that challenged the sexual and social limits placed on women. Her work sits at the crossroads of literature, social reform, and the intense debates of the early 1900s.
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