Christina Klausmann (7 December 1957 – 21 October 2008) was a German historian, publicist and curator specializing in gender relations and women's movement culture in Germany.
[5][6] Klausmann's social-historical local study was produced as part of the German Research Foundation (DFG) funded project Sittlichkeit und Stimmrecht - Zur Politik und Kultur der Frauenbewegung um die Jahrhundertwende under the direction of Ute Gerhard at the Department of Sociology at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main and in collaboration with Ulla Wischermann.
In an "approach to a collective biography", the study also shows individual leading players, including the cousins Anna Edinger (1863–1929) and Bertha Pappenheim (1859–1936), in their mediating functions between the local, national and international women's movement.
Klausmann also relates the forms of organization and representation of the first women's movement as well as their strategies for mobilizing supporters to the particularities of the historical urban public: a relatively large proportion of the activists came from the liberal Jewish middle classes with close organizational and personal ties to the social reform circles.
Klausmann then worked as a research assistant at the Haus der Geschichte Baden-Württemberg in Stuttgart and was responsible, among other things, for the permanent exhibition "Landesgeschichte(n).