Luise Rinser (1911–2002)
Forfatter af Mirjam
Om forfatteren
Serier
Værker af Luise Rinser
Juliane 2 eksemplarer
Mein dicker Rucksack- Reise- Rateblock. 1 eksemplar
Der Sündenbock. Roman. 1 eksemplar
Thomas Mann und der Sozialismus 1 eksemplar
Jeugd van nu 1 eksemplar
Associated Works
Deutsche Kurzgeschichten : eine Auswahl für mittlere Klassen (1972) — Forfatter, nogle udgaver — 5 eksemplarer
Im Kerzenschein. Geschichten zum Träumen — Bidragyder — 2 eksemplarer
Moderne Erzähler 17 — Forfatter — 1 eksemplar
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Kanonisk navn
- Rinser, Luise
- Juridisk navn
- Rinser, Luise
- Fødselsdato
- 1911
- Dødsdag
- 2002-03-17
- Begravelsessted
- Wessobrun, Oberbayern, Deutschland
- Køn
- female
- Nationalitet
- Duitsland
- Fødested
- Pitzling/Oberbeiern, Beieren, Duitsland
- Dødssted
- Klooster Unterhaching, Beieren, Duitsland
- Bopæl
- Rome, Italy
- Uddannelse
- University of Munich
- Erhverv
- teacher
freelance journalist
short story writer
novelist
essayist - Relationer
- Schnell, Hans Günther (eerste ex-echtg.)
Herrmann, Klaus (tweede ex-echtg.)
Orff, Carl (derde ex-echtg.) - Organisationer
- Neue Zeitung, Munich, Magazine (Journaliste, critique littéraire, 19 45 | 19 58)
Diverses écoles de la Haute-Bavière (Institutrice, 19 35 | 19 39)
Académie allemande pour la langue et la littérature (Membre)
Archives littéraires allemandes, Marbach (Conservateur des archives)
Accademia Tiberia, Rome (Membre)
Accademia Internazionale Medicea, Florence (Membre) - Priser og hædersbevisninger
- Heinrich-Heine-Preis
Heinrich-Mann-Preis - Kort biografi
- Luise Rinser was born to a middle-class family in Pitzling in Upper Bavaria, Germany. She studied psychology and teaching at the University of Munich and received a teacher's certificate in 1934. She taught grade school and wrote her first short stories for the journal Herdfeuer. Her first book was Rings of Glass (1941), a coming-of-age novel. In 1939, she gave up teaching and married Horst Günther Schnell, a composer and choir director with whom she had two children. He died on the Russian Front in World War II. After his death, she married Klaus Herrmann, another writer; this marriage was annulled around 1952. Her third husband was composer Carl Orff, whom she divorced in 1960. In 1944, she was accused of treason by the Nazi regime, convicted, and sent to Traunstein women's prison where she survived by stealing food. She later described her experiences in a book based on her diaries, Gefängnistagebuch (A Woman's Prison Journal, 1946), which became a bestseller. After the war, she was a freelance writer for the newspaper Neue Zeitung München. She became one of the most celebrated and politically engaged authors in Germany, publishing about 30 works that included novels, short stories, and political essays. In 1984, she was proposed by the Green Party as a Presidential candidate.
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Associated Authors
Statistikker
- Værker
- 92
- Also by
- 6
- Medlemmer
- 847
- Popularitet
- #30,190
- Vurdering
- 3.6
- Anmeldelser
- 17
- ISBN
- 157
- Sprog
- 9
- Udvalgt
- 1
Robert Musil : Trois femmes suivi de Noces, traduit par Philippe Jaccotet (Le Seuil).
Erich Maria Remarque : Arc de triomphe, traduit par Michel Hérubel (Plon).
Ernst Wiechert : La commandante, traduit par P. Hofer-Bury (Calmann-Lévy).
Se reporter au compte rendu de Jacques DELPEYROU
In: Revue Esprit Nouvelle série, No. 316 (4) (AVRIL 1963), pp. 706-709… ; (en ligne),
URL : https://esprit.presse.fr/article/delpeyrou-jacques/robert-musil-trois-femmes-sui...… (mere)