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Autobiographical Selves: The Lebensbeschreibung of Regula Engel (1761–1853), the “Swiss Amazon”

Autobiographical Selves: The Lebensbeschreibung of Regula Engel (1761–1853), the “Swiss Amazon” Abstract: This article examines the autobiography of Regula Engel (1761–1853), commonly known as the “Swiss Amazon.” Engel accompanied her husband, a member of a Swiss regiment serving the French, to battlefields in various countries. She cross-dressed as a male soldier and bore twenty-one children. Her husband’s death in 1815 left Engel without any financial means. In 1821, she published her life narrative, Lebensbeschreibung (Life Description), to generate income and secure potential benefactors. As a lower-class, cross-dressing, Zürich woman working in the retinue of a mercenary army, Engel not only challenges the autobiographical genre’s underlying presupposition of a male bourgeois subject but also questions early-nineteenth-century notions of femininity and thereby reinserts women into the writing of history. (SMH) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature & Culture University of Nebraska Press

Autobiographical Selves: The Lebensbeschreibung of Regula Engel (1761–1853), the “Swiss Amazon”

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Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
Copyright
Copyright © University of Nebraska Press
ISSN
1940-512X
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract: This article examines the autobiography of Regula Engel (1761–1853), commonly known as the “Swiss Amazon.” Engel accompanied her husband, a member of a Swiss regiment serving the French, to battlefields in various countries. She cross-dressed as a male soldier and bore twenty-one children. Her husband’s death in 1815 left Engel without any financial means. In 1821, she published her life narrative, Lebensbeschreibung (Life Description), to generate income and secure potential benefactors. As a lower-class, cross-dressing, Zürich woman working in the retinue of a mercenary army, Engel not only challenges the autobiographical genre’s underlying presupposition of a male bourgeois subject but also questions early-nineteenth-century notions of femininity and thereby reinserts women into the writing of history. (SMH)

Journal

Women in German Yearbook: Feminist Studies in German Literature & CultureUniversity of Nebraska Press

Published: Nov 7, 2009

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