Anna Branting's parents were
police inspector Erik Jäderin and Charlotta Gustava Holm. She married lieutenant and nobleman Gustav Vilhelm von Kraemer (1851–1884) in 1877, and divorced him in 1883. She married secondly to Hjalmar Branting in 1884. She had two children with her first husband, Vera and Henry von Kraemer, and two with her second,
Georg Branting and
Sonja Branting. She was educated at the
statens normalskola för flickor in 1868–72. She was a journalist at the papers
Tiden in 1884–1886; at the
Socialdemokraten in 1886–1892, in
Stockholmstidningen 1892–1909, and a second time in
Socialdemokraten in 1913–1917. Anna Branting belonged to a pioneer generation of women journalists, who had their breakthrough in the Swedish press in the 1880s, and she belonged to the first group of women to be given a permanent position at a newspaper. She started working as a translator after her divorce and was given a position at the paper of Branting, who was to become her second spouse: after he lost his fortune, she long supported the family. From 1892 she had a successful career as a theater critic, respected and feared because of her sharp and witty reviews and a permanent reserved seat at the
Royal Dramatic Theatre. She debuted as a novelist in 1893. The main theme of her novels was a part of contemporary debate: the conflict between a woman, brought up under circumstances shaped by an older society, but frustrated because her views and longing belonged to the new society, which were at the time undergoing a rapid change in women's role. ==Bibliography==