Gabriella breath

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Gabriella Hauch (born July 18, 1959 in Salzburg ) is an Austrian historian and professor of modern history with a focus on women's and gender history .

life and work

Gabriella Hauch studied German philology and history for the teaching post at the University of Salzburg from 1977 to 1984 and completed her studies with a master's thesis in philology on the writer Irmgard Keun and in history with a thesis on women in the revolution of 1848 . In 1990 the doctorate to Dr. phil. with a dissertation on affirmation and resistance. Women's life in the Vienna Vormärz and the Revolution of 1848 . She completed her habilitation at the University of Linz , which awarded her the venia docendi for modern history and contemporary history in 1996 . In her habilitation thesis entitled Vom Frauenstandpunkt aus. Women in Parliament 1919-1933 , she devoted herself to the history of women's suffrage in Austria, which was introduced at the end of the First World War and the monarchy in the new republic .

In 1997/98 Gabriella Hauch took on a substitute professorship at the Institute for History at the University of Innsbruck . In 2001 she was a founding professor and until 2011 head of the university-wide Institute for Women and Gender Studies at the Johannes Kepler University in Linz. From 2001 to 2004 she was also co-director of the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Social and Cultural History Linz-Graz-Salzburg .

In September 2011 she was appointed to the professorship for Modern History / Women's and Gender History at the University of Vienna, succeeding Edith Saurer . Her main focus in teaching, research and publications is women's and gender history in Europe since the French Revolution, gender and National Socialism, women and politics in Austria 1848–1938.

From 1999 to 2005 Gabriella Hauch was President of the International Conference of Labor and Social History (ITH), of which she has been a member of the Scientific Advisory Board since 2006.

She is co-editor of the Austrian Journal of History and since 2012 for the journal L'Homme as well as of scientific series in the Studien Verlag (Innsbruck-Vienna-Munich) and Campus Verlag .

Awards

Fonts (selection)

Monographs

  • Women.Life.Linz. A women's and gender history in the 19th and 20th centuries , Linz 2013 (About the book: Archive of the City of Linz: Women.Leben.Linz , pdf )
  • Women make politics. Austria 1848-1938 (= Studies on Women and Gender Studies, Vol. 10), Innsbruck-Wien-Bozen 2009, 2nd edition 2010
  • Nazi forced labor at the Linz location of Hermann Göring AG Berlin, 1938 - 1945 , ed. v. Oliver Rathkolb, Vol. 1: Forced and slave laborers , Vienna-Cologne-Weimar, 2001 (with Christian Gonsa and others)
  • From the women's point of view. Women in Parliament from 1919 to 1933 , Vienna 1995
  • Mrs. Biedermeier on the barricades. Women's life in the Vienna Revolution 1848 , Vienna 1990

Editing

  • Epoch thresholds (with Monika Mommertz, Claudia Opitz-Belakhal ), Cologne 2014
  • Women's and Gender History of National Socialism. Questions, perspectives, new research , Innsbruck-Vienna-Bozen 2007 (together with Johanna Gehmacher)
  • Love and resistance. Ambivalences of historical gender relations , in: L'Homme writings 10th series on Feminist History, Vienna - Cologne - Weimar 2005. (together with Christa Hämmerle and Ingrid Bauer)
  • Industry and Forced Labor under National Socialism. Daimler Benz –VW - Reichswerke Hermann Göring locations in Linz and Salzgitter . With the collaboration of Birgit Kirchmayr and Peter Gutschner, Vienna - Innsbruck-Munich - Bozen 2003
  • Populism in Austria and France. Ideology, Politics and Practice , Vienna-Innsbruck-Munich 2002. (together with Thomas Hellmuth and Paul Pasteur)
  • From the 'realm of freedom'. Liberalism, Republic, Democracy 1848-1998 , Vienna 1999. (together with Maria Mesner)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Historian Gabriella Hauch receives State Prize for Gender Studies , Der Standard, March 25, 2014
  2. Women's Ring Prize for Sibylle Hamann, Gabriella Hauch and Ulli Weish . Article dated April 6, 2016, accessed June 26, 2016.
  3. 2020 City of Vienna Prize - Humanities and Social Sciences