Zinaida Ivanova


Zinaida Sergeevna Ivanova, was a Russian feminist author and translator, under the pen-names of N. Mirovich and Zinaida Mirovich.

Life

Zinaida Ivanova was born 1865 and grew up in Moscow; she graduated from the Courses Guerrier for Women in 1897. Shortly afterwards, she married and began to volunteer with the Moscow Commission on the Organization of Home Reading. Fluent in English, French, German, Norwegian, Finnish and Russian, she began freelance writing and translating. As that dried up in the early years of the first decade of the 20th century, she turned to lecture tours to supplement her income. Ivanova died on 24 August 1913, at Vladykino, a suburb of Moscow.

Activities

She began writing on women's issues, especially with reference to the French Revolution, shortly after her marriage, sometimes using the pseudonyms 'N. Mirovich' and 'Zinaida Mirovich', and translated several of the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen's best-known plays into Russian. Ivanova attended the London congress of the International Council of Women in 1899 and twice addressed congresses of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance on the status of the Russian women's movement. Her fluency in English and Anglophilia allowed her to spend a lot of time in Britain, speaking at women's suffrage rallies in Hyde Park, London, and translating the English philosopher John Stuart Mill's essay, The Subjection of Women, into Russian. Ivanova was one of the founders of the All-Russian Union for Women's Equality during the Russian Revolution of 1905 and joined the All-Russian League for Women's Equality after the Union disbanded in 1908.