Thomas Thorild
Thomas Thorild (Svarteborg, Bohuslän, 18 April 1759 – Greifswald, Swedish Pomerania, 1 October 1808), was a Swedish poet, critic, feminist and philosopher.
He was born in Svarteborg, Sweden and died at Greifswald, which was then Swedish Pomerania, and is now part of the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. His original name was Thomas Thorén and he studied at Lund University in Sweden and worked or studied at the University of Greifswald in Germany.
He was an important member of the cultural elite in Stockholm during the Gustavian era. He was popular among women because of his beauty and because of his ideas of gender equality; he aroused much attention with his idea, that just as a man was seen as a person first, and as a man (a gender and sexual object) second, a woman, who was seen as a gender and sexual object first and as a person second, should have the right to be seen upon the same way: "Just as foolish as it is to regard a woman only in the capacity of a SHE, it would be to regard a man only in the capacity of a HE".
Thorildsplan is named after him.
Works
English language
- The sermon of sermons on the impiety of priests and the fall of religion." 1789
- True heavenly religion restored and demonstrated upon eternal principles : With a call to Christians of higher sense. 1790
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Thomas Thorild. |
- Herman Lindqvist, Historien om Sverige. Gustavs dagar (The History of Sweden. The days of Gustav III)
- Mortensen, B.M.E. (1953), "Thorild, Thomas", in Steinberg, Sigfrid H., Cassell's Encyclopedia of World Literature, London: Cassell, OCLC 874557477.
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