This fictional autobiography concerns a female activist for peace and human rights; through the form of biography, peace activist Bertha von Suttner passionately advances her lifelong beliefs and passions.
In using the name Martha von Tilling, Bertha von Suttner sought to widen the scope of the antiwar message while drawing a clear parallel to her life's work. By placing Martha at the forefront of the horrors of war and the destruction and terror that it brings, we are offered the raw and horrific truths of conflict. This book thus contains both the academic arguments in favor of pacifism and an abandonment of conflict as being a way forward for humanity, plus a horrific evocation of a visceral war and the bloody aftermath of battle.
For years, Bertha von Suttner was at the forefront of campaigning for peace in Europe, meeting with government officials and speaking at prominent events. An adept orator, political journalist and organizer, it was by von Suttner's initiative that the concept of the Peace Conference was brought into being. Martha's final years were hectic and stressful - the governments of Europe were building enormous quantities of weapons and warships. Her difficulties were compounded by a diagnosis of cancer, from which she died in 1914, mere months before the outbreak of World War One.
Author of Anywhere But Schuylkill, #WorkingClass #HistoricalFiction from the not so gilded age. Labor History. Mastodon: @MikeDunnAuthor@kolektiva.social
Today in Labor History 6/9/1843: Bertha von Suttner was born. Austrian #author, #Peace activist & #NobelPrize laureate. Wrote “Lay Down Your Arms,” anti-war & #feminist #Novel. Tolstoy compared her favorably with Harriet Beecher Stowe. https://t.co/71WP8KMEIM
Posing urgent questions about the world we live in. Projects include Festival of Ideas, Festival of Economics and Festival of the Future City.
The first anti-war film in WW1 – though it was not about the war - was the Danish Die Waffen neider/ Lay Down Your Arms based on the book by Nobel Peace Prize Winner Bertha Von Suttner. Released in 1914, in the US it was used to support isolationism. https://t.co/bd8iqHHqmK 4/ https://t.co/vbsQLH786n
The official Twitter feed of the Nobel Prize @NobelPrize #NobelPrize
Bertha von Suttner was the first woman awarded the #NobelPeacePrize. Her influential anti-war novel 'Lay Down Your Arms' (1889) was provocative to many, but the anti-militaristic message caught on. She is credited as the inspiration behind the creation of the peace prize. https://t.co/ZuDrvk2MYA