Jump to content

Elisabeth Joris

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elisabeth Joris (born 1946) is a Swiss historian. She has written and edited several works on gender history in Switzerland, and was co-editor of feminist magazine Olympe, and co-initiator of the 1991 Swiss women's strike. She was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Zurich in 2020.

Biography

[edit]

Joris was born in 1946 in Visp.[1] She grew up in Visp[1] and has lived in Zürich since 1966.[2] Joris graduated from school at a time when women rarely proceeded to higher education, so she first gained her teaching qualification.[3] She studied history and history of French literature at the University of Zurich[4] and earned a licentiate degree under the direction of Rudolf Braun in 1980. Although she began a doctorate, she found she preferred to study women's history, which at the time was not considered by her professors to be a suitable subject for a doctoral degree.[3] She then worked as an elementary school teacher and a freelance historian.[5][3] She has taught at the Riesbach Cantonal School in Zurich and at the Lucerne School of Social Work.[6] She retired in 2010.[7]

Joris co-founded the group Kritisches Oberwallis and the critical newspaper Rote Anneliese [de].[8] She edited several works about women's and gender history in Switzerland.[9][10] In 1986, she published a pioneering source book about women's history in Switzerland alongside Heidi Witzig.[4] Joris wrote two articles, Women, Gender, Social Movements (Switzerland) and Züblin-Spiller, Else for the International Encyclopedia of the First World War.[11]

In 2010, she submitted the manuscript of her fifth book to the University of Zurich as her dissertation, finally earning a doctorate.[3] Joris was a co-editor of the feminist magazine Olympe.[8] Joris was a co-initiator of the first Swiss women's strike in 1991.[3]

Joris is married and a mother of two.[5]

Publications (selection)

[edit]

As an author

[edit]
  • Elisabeth Seiler-Joris, Sozialer Wandel im Oberwallis in der zweiten Hälfte des neunzehnten Jahrhunderts. Zürich: 1979 (licentiate thesis, University of Zurich, 1980).
  • with Heidi Witzig: Brave Frauen, aufmüpfige Weiber: Wie sich die Industrialisierung auf Alltag und Lebenszusammenhänge von Frauen auswirkte (1820–1940). Zurich: Chronos, 1992.
  • with Adrian Knoepfli: Eine Frau prägt eine Firma: Zur Geschichte von Firma und Familie Feller. Zürich: Chronos, 1996.
  • Liberal und eigensinnig: Die Pädagogin Josephine Stadlin – die Homöopathin Emilie Paravicini-Blumer. Handlungsspielräume von Bildungsbürgerinnen im 19. Jahrhundert. Zürich: Chronos, 2010 (dissertation, University of Zurich, 2010).

As an editor

[edit]
  • with Heidi Witzig: Frauengeschichte(n): Dokumente aus zwei Jahrhunderten zur Situation der Frauen in der Schweiz. Zürich Limmat, 1986.
  • with Katrin Rieder and Béatrice Ziegler [de]: Tiefenbohrungen: Frauen und Männer auf den grossen Tunnelbaustellen der Schweiz, 1870–2005. Baden: Hier + jetzt, 2006.
  • with Erika Hebeisen [de], Angela Zimmermann: Zürich 68: Kollektive Aufbrüche ins Ungewisse. Baden: Hier + jetzt, 2008.
  • with Renate Wegmüller: „Stimmen, wählen und gewählt zu werden sei hinfort unsere Devise und unser Ziel“. Kurze Geschichte des Frauenstimmrechts in Quellen. Wettingen, eFeF, 2011.
  • with Rita Schmid: Damit der Laden läuft. Ein kritischer Blick in die scheinbar vertraute Welt des Detailhandels. Zürich: Rotpunktverlag, 2019.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Bio". Kulturplatz (in German). Schweizer Fernsehen. Archived from the original on 20 February 2011. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
  2. ^ Keller, Stefan (3 November 2016). "Interview mit Elisabeth Joris". WOZ Die Wochenzeitung (in German). Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Dr. Elisabeth Joris". www.uzh.ch (in German). Retrieved 28 April 2025.
  4. ^ a b "Elisabeth Joris und ihr Standardwerk". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). 7 April 2002. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
  5. ^ a b Brändle, Rea (8 March 2007). ""Nicht lockergelassen"". Die Wochenzeitung (in German).
  6. ^ "Elisabeth Joris und ihr Standardwerk". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in Swiss High German). 7 April 2002. ISSN 0376-6829. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
  7. ^ "Elisabeth Joris: Gender Campus". www.gendercampus.ch. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
  8. ^ a b Nigg, Heinz (2008). "Elisabeth Joris: Elisabeth Joris, 1946, Historikerin und Mittelschullehrerin, Zürich". In Ders. (ed.). Wir sind wenige, aber wir sind alle: Biografien aus der 68er-Generation in der Schweiz (in German). Zürich: Limmat. p. 114.
  9. ^ Elisabeth Joris at perlentaucher.de – das Kulturmagazin (in German) Accessed 28 April 2025
  10. ^ "Elisabeth Joris". Women Writing Architecture. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
  11. ^ "Elisabeth Joris". 1914-1918-Online (WW1) Encyclopedia. Retrieved 28 April 2025.
[edit]