[1] Oda Olberg was born in Bremerhaven on 2 October 1872, the daughter of a German naval officer.
[1] A feminist, in 1902 Olberg published Women and Intellectualism as a rejoinder to 'On the Physiological Feeblemindedess of Woman' by Paul Julius Möbius.
Though neither men nor women should make successive generations pay by 'excessive' mental application, mothering should ideally be imbued with intellectual elements.
[1] After the socialist failure to resist Nazism in the 1934 Austrian Civil War, Olberg went into exile, rejoining her son Edgardo in Buenos Aires.
She wrote in Spanish for several Argentinean journals, including Critica, as well as the German-language Argentinisches Tageblatt.