Lis Asklund
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Louise Viveka Ulrika Asklund, (born Lagercrantz, known by the nickname ''Lis''), () was a
Swedish Swedish or ' may refer to: Anything from or related to Sweden, a country in Northern Europe. Or, specifically: * Swedish language, a North Germanic language spoken primarily in Sweden and Finland ** Swedish alphabet, the official alphabet used by ...
sex educator Sex education, also known as sexual education, sexuality education or sex ed, is the instruction of issues relating to human sexuality, including human sexual anatomy, Human sexual activity, sexual activity, sexual reproduction, safe sex, birth ...
, television and radio presenter, and author.


Early life and marriage

Born in 1913, Lis Asklund's father was a former naval officer who ran a peat factory who later ran an insurance company and a bank. She was one of five children that her parents had together, with her father also later having three children after remarrying. Her brother,
Olof Lagercrantz Olof Gustaf Hugo Lagercrantz (10 March 1911 – 23 July 2002) was a Swedish writer, critic, literary scholar (PhD 1951) and publicist (editor-in-chief of ''Dagens Nyheter'' 1960–1975). Life and career Lagercrantz was born in Stockholm, Swede ...
, went on to become a prominent author. Her father wished his daughters to gain education and opportunities to his sons, and Lis Asklund gained her school-leaving certificate at the Wallin school in Stockholm after moving there. From 1933 to 1936 Lis Asklund trained as a nurse with the Swedish Red Cross at
Sabbatsberg hospital Sabbatsberg Hospital () is a former hospital in central Stockholm, Sweden. Its located on , situated between Torsgatan, Vasaparken, Tegnérgatan by Barnhusbron, and Dalagatan in Vasastan. It was opened in 1879. History Based on the proposal of ...
, before going on to spend a year in London with the Florence Nightingale International Foundation, where she studied a broad range of subjects related to sociology, psychology, ethics, philosophy, and healthcare. She also gained practical experience working in the poor East End of London. After returning to Sweden in 1938, Lis Asklund became one of only two hospital almoners (essentially social workers working within hospitals) working in Sweden at the time. She continued as an almoner until 1949. In the same year as starting work as an almoner in Sweden, Lis Asklund also met Erik Asklund, with whom she was married in 1940. Erik Asklund was an author, and their social circle included a number of Swedish literary and cultural figures of the time, including
Ivar Lo-Johansson Ivar Lo-Johansson (23 February 1901 – 11 April 1990) was a Swedish writer of the Proletarian literature, proletarian school. His autobiographical 1978 memoir, ''Pubertet'' (''Puberty''), won the Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1979. Biogr ...
,
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,
Gunnar Ekelöf Bengt Gunnar Ekelöf (15 September 1907 – 16 March 1968) was a Swedish poet and writer. He was a member of the Swedish Academy from 1958 and was awarded an honorary doctorate in philosophy by Uppsala University in 1958. He won a number of prize ...
,
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, and Tora Dahl. The couple went on to have a daughter (Malin) in 1946 and a son (Jonas) in 1951. Lis Asklund later described her marriage to Erik Asklund as unhappy in her 1986 biographical book ''Uppbrott'' (Departure), and they were eventually divorced in 1980.


Career in sexual health

The first law legalising
abortion in Sweden Abortion in Sweden was first legislated by the Abortion Act of 1938.Official Statistics of Sweden: Statistics – Health and Medical Care: Induced abortions 2009'' (2010) National Board of Health and Welfare. . This stated that an abortion coul ...
had been introduced under the Abortion Act of 1938, however this only allowed abortion under very limited circumstances. This had led to women seeking dangerous illegal back-street abortionists as they were not able to have legal abortions. The feminist journalist Elise Ottesen-Jensen (known by her pen-name ''Ottar'') approached Lis Asklund in 1940 to establish an office for the Swedish Association for Sexuality Education (''Riksförbund för sexuell upplysning'') where women could go for advice and could therefore be steered away from dangerous abortionists. Part of this involved helping women apply to have an abortion, though in the early years many applications were rejected. Lis Asklund worked voluntarily in this office in the evenings alongside her work as an almoner. Two years after the establishment of this office, Asklund established a further sexual health advice centre for Stockholm city, together with a colleague. Lis Asklund campaigned for the relaxation of abortion laws in Sweden and was a witness before a census enquiry on abortions, and later the 1950 official enquiry into abortion. Her efforts bore partial fruit in 1946 when socio-economic grounds were allowed as a reason for having an abortion, which increased the number of successful applications for abortions to roughly half. In 1975 abortion in Sweden became available on demand up to the 18th week of pregnancy.


Broadcasting career and later life

In 1956, Lis Asklund began appearing on the weekly radio programme ''Människor emellan'' (Between People) broadcast by the Swedish Broadcasting Corporation. On the show, Asklund answered letters from listeners asking for advice about various personal problems, such as, for example, a married man with a family who claimed to be addicted to pornography. Asklund appeared on the programme until 1968, receiving roughly 100 letters a week (80% from women) and reaching a weekly audience of roughly 700,000 people. Asklund also appeared on other radio programmes, including a 1959 report into conditions at the ''Eugeniahem'' disabled children's home in Stockholm where she reported harsh conditions and strict punishments being meted out to children for minor infractions. A state commission tried to stop the broadcasting of the programme, howevert this attempt instead resulted in the Swedish radio act being amended to include a specific mandate to broadcast socially important works. The report was followed by an official inquiry in 1961 which confirmed her findings, and the home was subsequently shut down. Asklund also hosted a television fundraiser in 1965 that funded the construction of 300 homes for disabled people. During the 1970s Asklund was introduced to the Fountain House model of treating mental illnesses in New York, where mental health issues are treated in the community in a clubhouse, rather than necessarily in a clinical setting. Asklund subsequently introduced the model to Scandinavia, starting the Swedish Fountain House Foundation in 1979, assisting in the founding of several branches within Sweden, and becoming an honorary member of two Swedish clubhouses. Asklund was awarded the Socrates Prize in 1978. The prize was awarded for Asklund's "many years of socially critical activities as a reporter and producer on radio and television". Asklund had a number of books published during her life, including ''Vägen till mognad'' (The Road To Maturity) in 1966 with Torsten Wickbom which focused on equality of the sexes, ''Samtal är arbete'' (Conversations are work) on the importance of doctors talking to their patients, and her memoir ''Uppbrott'' in 1986.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Asklund, Lis 1913 births 2006 deaths 20th-century Swedish women writers Sex educators Swedish women memoirists