Emilie Kiep-Altenloh (1888–1985) was a German sociologist and politician.
Kiep-Altenloh's doctorate, published as a book in 1914, was "the first scholarly publication on cinema in Germany". [1]
Kiep-Altenloh was politically active in the German Democratic Party, advocating equality between men and women. The Nazis prohibited her involvement in politics, promoting a turn to biology and zoology in 1934. She joined Jakob Johann von Uexküll's Institut für Umweltforschung, [2] later taking charge of the Institute and its work training guide dogs for the blind. [3]
From 1961 to 1965 Kiep-Altenloh was a member of the Bundestag. [2]
Emilie Kiep-Altenloh (1888–1985) was a German sociologist and politician.
Kiep-Altenloh's doctorate, published as a book in 1914, was "the first scholarly publication on cinema in Germany". [1]
Kiep-Altenloh was politically active in the German Democratic Party, advocating equality between men and women. The Nazis prohibited her involvement in politics, promoting a turn to biology and zoology in 1934. She joined Jakob Johann von Uexküll's Institut für Umweltforschung, [2] later taking charge of the Institute and its work training guide dogs for the blind. [3]
From 1961 to 1965 Kiep-Altenloh was a member of the Bundestag. [2]