Fredrika Bremer is the namesake of
Frederika, a town in the American
state of
Iowa, and its surrounding
Bremer County. She is also the namesake of
Fredrika Bremer Intermediate School in
Minneapolis,
Minnesota. The
American Swedish Historical Museum in
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, includes a Fredrika Bremer Room dedicated to her accomplishments.
Literary notes Bremer describing the
St. Croix river valley in the state of
Minnesota as "just the country for a new Scandinavia" Fredrika Bremer's novels were usually romantic stories of the time, typically concerning an independent woman narrating her observations of others negotiating the marriage market. She argued for a new family life less focused on its male members and providing a larger place for women's talents and personalities. Reflecting her own childhood, many of her works include a sharp urban/rural dichotomy; without exception, these present nature as a place of renewal, revelation, and self-discovery. By the time Bremer revealed her name to the public, her works were an acknowledged part of the cultural life in Sweden. Translations made her still more popular abroad, where she was regarded as the "Swedish
Miss Austen". Upon her arrival in New York, the
New York Herald claimed she "probably... has more readers than any other female writer on the globe" and proclaimed her the author "of a new style of literature". A literary celebrity, Bremer was never without a place to stay during her two years in America despite having known no one before her arrival. She was praised by
Ralph Waldo Emerson and
Walt Whitman and
Louisa May Alcott's
Little Women includes a scene of Mrs March reading from Bremer's works to her four daughters. Her popularity abroad crested, however, in the 1840s and 1850s and faded by the turn of the century, although the late nineteenth century English novelist
George Gissing read
Hertha in 1889. Within Sweden, she continued to be highly respected, though little read. The publication of her letters in the 1910s revived scholarly interest, but only in her personal life and travels. By 1948, the Swedish critic Algot Werin was writing that Bremer "really only lives as a name and a symbol... It does not matter if her novels are forgotten." Bremer's novels were rediscovered by
Swedish feminists in the latter half of the 20th century and are undergoing critical reëvaluation.
Social causes Fredrika Bremer was interested in contemporary political life and social reform regarding gender equality and social work, and she was active both as an influential participator in the debate of women's rights as well as a philanthropist. Politically, she was a liberal, who felt sympathy for social issues and for the working class movement. In 1853, she co-founded the Stockholms fruntimmersförening för barnavård (Stockholm women's fund for child care) with
Fredrika Limnell. In 1854, she co-founded the Women's Society for the Improvement of Prisoners (
Fruntimmersällskapet för fångars förbättring) together with
Mathilda Foy,
Maria Cederschiöld,
Betty Ehrenborg and Emilia Elmblad. The purpose was to visit female prisoners to provide moral support and improve their character by studies of religion. Her novel
Hertha (1856) remains her most influential work. It is a dark novel about the lack of freedom for women, and it raised a debate in the parliament called "The Hertha debate", which contributed to the new law of
legal majority for adult unmarried women in Sweden in 1858, and was somewhat of a starting point for the real feminist movement in Sweden.
Hertha also raised the debate of higher formal education for women, and in 1861, the University for Women Teachers,
Högre lärarinneseminariet, was founded by the state after the suggested women's university in
Hertha. In 1859,
Sophie Adlersparre, founded the paper
Tidskrift för hemmet inspired by the novel. This was the starting point for Adlersparre's work as the organizer of the Swedish feminist movement. The women's magazine
Hertha, named after the novel, was founded in 1914. In 1860, she helped
Johanna Berglind to fund
Tysta Skolan, a school for the deaf and mute in Stockholm. At the electoral reforms regarding the right to vote of 1862, she supported the idea to give women the right to vote, which was talked about as the "horrific sight" of seeing "
crinolines at the election boxes", but Bremer gave the idea her support, and the same year, women of legal majority
were granted suffrage in municipal elections in Sweden. The first real Women's rights movement in Sweden, the Fredrika Bremer Association (
Fredrika Bremer Förbundet), founded by
Sophie Adlersparre in 1884, was named after her. Bremer was happy to mention and to recommend the work of other female professionals. She mentioned both the doctor
Lovisa Årberg and the engraver
Sofia Ahlbom in her work. ==Works==