Jo van Ammers-Küller explained

Johanna van Ammers-Küller (13 August 1884, Noordeloos – 23 January 1966, Bakel) was a Dutch writer. She was one of the most successful European female writers in the interwar period, though her reputation suffered as a result of her collaboration during World War II.[1]

Life

Johanna Küller grew up in Delft, the only child of middle-class parents. By the age of 18 she was engaged to Rudolf van Ammers, an engineer, and she married him when she was 21. He became head of the Municipal Lighting Works in Leiden.[2]

De opstandigen (The Rebel Generation) published in 1925 is her most famous work. She describes the fights of three generations of women of the same family to be the equal of men among the limitations imposed by the Calvinist environment they live in.[3]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Book: Wilken Engelbrecht. Kris Van Heuckelom . Dieter de Bruyn . Carl De Strycker . Van eeden tot heden: Literaire dwarsverbanden tussen Midden-Europa en de Lage Landen (Lage Landen Studies 5). https://books.google.com/books?id=_IJ0AgAAQBAJ&pg=PA155. 2013. Academia Press. 978-90-382-2091-8. 155. A figurehead of moral rehabilitation: Jo van Ammers-Küller.
  2. Book: Jane Fenoulhet. Making the Personal Political: Dutch Women Writers 1919-1970. 2007. MHRA. 978-1-905981-37-3. 96.
  3. Web site: Jo van Ammers-Küller Dutch author. 2021-02-12. Encyclopedia Britannica. en.