Christiane Erlemann is the daughter of a pharmacist (at that time a profession requiring a high school diploma) and a bank clerk who both ran a grocery shop.
It was about completely different things: about § 218, leaving the church, self-awareness groups, self-help and the concept of women's oppression in general.
Rather, we see the need to research the connections mentioned more thoroughly and present them more clearly.The group took part in the protest against the Brokdorf nuclear power plant.
Erlemann and Pauls then invited women in scientific and technical professions and study programmes to the first national meeting in Aachen.
This resulted in the Congress of Women in Science and Technology (FiNuT), a regular, autonomously organised exchange in German-speaking countries.
[5] After moving to Berlin, Erlemann was involved in the founding of the Feminist Organisation of Women Planners and Architects (FOPA) in 1981.
She used biographically orientated narrative interviews to show the entanglements of professional experiences with the personal background and the resulting actions.
The discussion of political consequences and the thematisation of gender to explore, explain and change structures in the technical and scientific field are particularly important to her.
[8] The archive of the Stiftung Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin holds a collection of documents under the name VV FiNuT, including those of Rosemarie Rübsamen, Helene Götschel and Christiane Erlemann.