The Spinster Mother of Ada Christen is a forgotten nineteenth-century European novel by a Viennese author whose works have found no place either in Austrian literary reception or in that specifically concerning women's literature.
As late as 1984, Ada Christen was still listed among Hahnl's "forgotten writers," and in Treder's anthology of 19th-century female poets he devoted only a few lines to her. Christen's literary contributions were not mentioned in the 1985 History of Women's Literature, contributing to her status as an overlooked author within the European literary canon.
The poet's lyrical work has been credited with catalyzing a broadening of literary discourse. However, Ada Christen's oeuvre is largely limited to these early poems, with which she made her name but from which she later distanced herself.
The focus of this work is Ada Christen's final and most extensive prose text, the 1892 Viennese suburban novel Jungfer Mutter. The first translation was published in Italian in 2022 under the title La zitella Madre.
The Spinster Mother is Christen's most substantial prose work. After its initial publication, it was republished in 1947 by Bellaria Verlag in Vienna and Munich, and by Buchergilde Gutenberg. Despite this, the novel remains a rarely studied work of nineteenth-century Austrian prose fiction.
Often described as a forgotten Viennese suburban novel, Jungfer Mutter has yet to receive a complete interpretation. Although listed in numerous encyclopedias and novel guides, it is still largely associated with the image of old Vienna, its bastions and suburbs.
In The Spinster Mother, however, Ada Christen is not dedicated to the preservation of vanished places, but to the analysis of the social panorama of major European cities at the end of the nineteenth century, situating the novel within a broader context of European social and urban literature.