Bente Hansen Explained

Bente Hansen (4 March 1940April 2022) was a Danish writer, editor and women's rights activist who was a prominent supporter of the Danish Red Stocking Movement from 1970. She published a number of books on socialism and the role of women and was coordinating editor of the daily newspaper Information in the mid-1970s, giving special attention to social movements.[1] [2]

Biography

Born on 4 March 1940 in Kolding, Hansen was the daughter of the veterinarian Hans Kristian Hansen and Grethe Vera Nornild, a teacher. After matriculating from Vestjsk Gymnasium in Tarm, she spent a year in Brussels, returning to Denmark to study literature at the University of Copenhagen. From 1961 to 1966, she was influenced by the strong women's traditions of Kvinderegensen, the women's college where she stayed. She received her M.A. in 1966.[1]

On the political front, she was influenced by a group of students from the Soviet Union she met in 1959, becoming an active left-wing socialist and a member of the Socialist People's Party. A talented orator, she was a strong supporter of free abortion and equal pay, causes she also developed as editor of the bimonthly journal Politisk Revy from 1966. From 1970, thanks to contacts with Ninon Schloss, she consistently devoted a column to the Red Stocking Movement. Over the next 15 years, she became one of the unofficial leaders of the women's movement in Denmark, participating in the gathering on the island of Femø in 1971. Together with Vibeke Vasbo and Mette Knudsen, she drafted a number of documents which became the ideology of the Red Stockings. She was the main speaker at the first women's meeting in Copenhagen's Fælledparken in 1975.[1]

Her role as an editor at Information from 1976, where she was one of just three women editors opposed by 33 men, proved too difficult, leading to her resignation in 1977. She nevertheless continued as a commentator at BT. She later participated in developing a major television series on women in the labour movement, broadcast in 1986. By 1990, as a result of exhaustion and increasingly poor health, she had to cut back on her activities.[1]

Hansen died in April 2022 after prolonged illness.[3]

Selected publications

Hansen published the following books in Danish:[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bente Hansen (1940 -). Paulsen, Inge-Lise and Nissen, Vibeke. Kvinfo. 29 May 2017. Danish.
  2. Web site: Bente_Hansen. Busk-Jensen, Lise. Den Store Danske. 29 May 2017. Danish.
  3. Web site: Forfatter og journalist Bente Hansen er død . . 27 April 2022 . 27 April 2022.
  4. Web site: Bøger. BenteHansen.info. 29 May 2017.