如果能知道她的中文名字可能会找到相关中文资料。
英文资料说她1957年移居中国后大部分时间在北京的一家外文出版社当编辑。大概率是外文出版社,大概率她在北京下葬,而北京唯一的hero’s cemetery是八宝山革命公墓,非一定级别不能进。
你如果真对她感兴趣可以试着联系外文出版社。
https://uofmpress.ca/books/detail/a-great-restlessness
A Great Restlessness
The Life and Politics of Dorise Nielsen
Faith Johnston (Author)
Dorise Nielsen was a pioneering feminist, a radical politician, the first Communist elected to Canada’s House of Commons, and the only woman elected in 1940. But despite her remarkable career, until now little has been known about her.
From her youth in London during World War I to
her burial in 1980 in a hero’s cemetery in China, Nielsen lived through tumultuous times. Struggling through the Great Depression as a homesteader’s wife in rural Saskatchewan, Nielsen rebelled against the poverty and injustice that surrounded her, and found like-minded activists in the CCF and the Communist Party of Canada. In 1940 when leaders of the Communist Party were either interned or underground, Nielsen became their voice in Parliament. But her activism came at a high price. As a single mother in Ottawa, she sacrificed a close relationship with her family for her career. As a woman in an emerging political organisation, her authority was increasingly usurped by younger male party members. As a committed communist, she moved to Mao’s China in 1957 and dedicated her life’s work to a cause that went seriously awry.
Faith Johnston illuminates the life of a woman who paved the way for a generation of women in politics, who tried to be both a good mother and a good revolutionary, and who refused to give up on either.
AWARDS
- Robert S. Kenny Prize in Marxist & Labour/Left Studies (2007)
- McNally Robinson Book of the Year (2006)
- The Eileen McTavish Sykes Award for Best First Book (2006)
- The Mary Scorer Award for Best Book by a Manitoba Publisher (2006)
- The Alexander Kennedy Isbister Award for Non-Fiction (2006)
REVIEWS
“This book is a captivating and exemplary rendition of the life of Neilsen. The explicit uses of varied sources, the detailed political analysis, as well as the keen attention to personal relations, collective solidarity, and social injustice, are praiseworthy and original contributions to historical scholarship.”
– Kathleen Lord, Mount Allison University, Left History, 14.1