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    • Swedish novelist, playwright and translator

      • Hilda Augusta Amanda Kerfstedt, née Hallström (5 June 1835, in Eskilstuna – 10 April 1920, in Stockholm), was a Swedish novelist, playwright and translator. She was a popular and noted writer in late 19th and early 20th century Sweden, and participated in public debate.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanda_Kerfstedt
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  2. Hilda Augusta Amanda Kerfstedt, née Hallström (5 June 1835, in Eskilstuna – 10 April 1920, in Stockholm), was a Swedish novelist, playwright and translator. She was a popular and noted writer in late 19th and early 20th century Sweden, and participated in public debate.

  3. Hilda Augusta Amanda Kerfstedt was the daughter of the mayor of Eskilstuna, was married twice, and was the mother of the literary critic Hellen Lindgren. She made her debut in 1865 under the pen name “…y” with Signhild och hennes vänner, ett exempel för unga flickor.

  4. Amanda Kerfstedt was a popular author and playwright in the decades around the turn of the twentieth century. To posterity she is mostly known for her literary portrayals of social hypocrisy and sexual double standards.

  5. Jul 14, 2011 · As early as in 1881, that is, three years before Björnson’s En Hanske (A Glove), Amanda Kerfstedt had demanded in her short story “Synd” (Sin) the same sexual abstinence before marriage from the man as from the woman.

  6. Hilda Augusta Amanda Kerfstedt, född Hallström 5 juni 1835 i Eskilstuna, död 10 april 1920 i Stockholm, var en svensk författare, dramatiker och översättare. Kerfstedt skrev romaner, noveller och dramatik, men också barn- och ungdomslitteratur, recensioner och artiklar.

  7. Hilda Augusta Amanda Kerfstedt, née Hallström (5 June 1835, in Eskilstuna – 10 April 1920, in Stockholm), was a Swedish novelist, playwright and translator. She was a popular and noted writer in late 19th and early 20th century Sweden, and participated in the public debate.

  8. The study’s subheading is daunting in itself: Children, morality and gender in the works of Amanda Kerfstedt, Helena Nyblom and Mathilda Malling 1880-1910. These are words as heavy as the book itself, an imposing tome from Makadam publishing.