My Seven Mothers: Making a Family in the Danish Women's Movement
By (Author) Pernille Ipsen
Translated by Tiina Nunnally
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
28th January 2026
United States
General
Non Fiction
Memoirs
Gender studies: women and girls
Social welfare and social services
Political activism / Political engagement
Hardback
360
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 18mm
539g
Seven women raise a child together while redefining their place in society at the beginning of the Women's Movement in Denmark in the 1970s
On New Year's Eve in Copenhagen in 1972, seven women had a child together: one gave birth and six others attended. They had met a year earlier at a feminist women's camp on a small island and now, with about twenty other women's liberationists, they occupied three dilapidated apartment buildings in the center of Copenhagen. One became the country's first Women's House, the nerve center of the Women's Movement in Denmark, and the other two were women-only communal living spaces that were Pernille Ipsen's first home. In this intimate portrait of life during the exhilarating early days of women's liberation in Scandinavia and dramatic social change around the globe, she tells the stories of these seven women, her seven mothers.
Recounting her mothers' history-from the passions and beliefs they shared to the political divisions over sexual identity that ultimately split them apart-Ipsen captures the individuality of each of her mothers as well as the common experiences that drew them together. As she deftly reflects the practical and emotional realities of her mothers' women-centered life, Ipsen presents an engrossing picture of intersecting lives that, half a century ago, raised questions we still grapple with today: What is a family Who is a woman And who gets to decide
A chronicle of gender, sexuality, and feminism as it was constructed, contested, and lived, My Seven Mothers is an eye-opening account of the challenges and possibilities connected with liberation and radical social change during the 1970s. In this time of fierce struggles over family, sexuality, and child-rearing, it reminds us that new worlds are always possible.
Pernille Ipsen was professor of gender and women's studies at the University of WisconsinMadison for fifteen years and now writes full-time. The Danish-language version of this book, Et bent jeblik (An open moment), was published in 2020 and was awarded the Montana Prize for literature, one of Denmark's top literary prizes.
Tiina Nunnally is the award-winning translator of more than seventy books from the Scandinavian languages, including Sigrid Undset's epic tetralogy Olav Audunssn, also published by the University of Minnesota Press. She was appointed Knight of the Royal Norwegian Order of Merit for her contributions to Norwegian literature in the United States.