Louise Compain
Louise Compain was a French novelist, journalist, freelance writer, feminist political activist, social reformer, and suffragist. She was the co-initiator of the feminist movement in France in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.Biography
Mélanie Louise Massebiau was born in Vierzon, France, April 23, 1869. She was the daughter of Jean Louis Adolphe Massebieau, professor at the Faculty of Protestant Theology in Paris, and Louise Françoise Marie Boissier.
Compain was a member of the French Union for Women's Suffrage. A writer and journalist, she became known at the beginning of the feminist movement by writing successful feminist novels. Compain was a social reformer who supported causes related to women's suffrage, women's unions, and women's labor struggles. According to Charity Organisation Society :—
In Paris, October 1888, she married Luc Compain, Associate Professor at the Lycée de Chaumont who died accidentally November 17, 1889, while preparing a thesis on the history of Geoffrey of Vendôme, published posthumously in 1891.
Compain was the aunt of Georgette Hammel, the great aunt of the feminist sociologist and writer Évelyne Sullerot, and the resistance activist, Élisabeth Quintenelle.
Compain died in december 1941 in Paris.Awards
- Academy prize for L'un vers l'autre
Works
- La Femme dans les organisations ouvrières, 1910
- La Vie tragique de Geneviève,1912
- L'Amour de Claire, 1915
- La Grand' Pitié des Campagnes de France, 1917
- Les Portes de la vie spirituelle, 1927
- La Robe déchirée, 1929
- Calendrier de la vie spirituelle ou les étapes de l'âme, 1938
Citations
Attribution
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