Search

Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Detering, Heinrich" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Detering, Heinrich" )' returned 12 results. Modify search

Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first

Tegnér

(244 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[English Version] Tegnér, Esaias (13.11.1782 Kyrkerud, Värmland – 2.11.1846 Växjö). Der Pfarrerssohn wurde 1810 in Lund Prof. für Ästhetik, 1812 für Gräzistik und nach patriotischen Versdichtungen (Svea, 1811) 1818 Mitglied der Schwedischen Akademie, für die er zahlreiche Werke vf. Nach klassizistischen Anfängen entstand 1818–1825, durch ästhetische Reflexionen und Verserzählungen (u.a. Nattvardsbarnen, dt. Die Konfirmanden, 1820; Axel, 1822) vorbereitet und begleitet, sein Hauptwerk, das epische G…

Runeberg

(182 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[English Version] Runeberg, Johan Ludvig (5.2.1804 Jakobstad, Finnland – 6.5.1877 Borgå, ebd.). Der schwedisch schreibende R. gilt neben Elias Lönnroth als Begründer einer eigenständigen finnischen Lit. Nach dem Studium der klassischen Philol. in Turku (Åbo) lebte er in Helsinki (Helsingfors), dann als Lehrer in Porvoo (Borgå), wo er bald als Nationaldichter verehrt wurde. R.s klassizistische Dramen (Die Könige auf Salamis, 1863), seine Kirchenlieder, lyrischen und epischen Gedichte, v.a. das als na…

Undset

(242 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[English Version] Undset, Sigrid (20.5.1882 Kalundborg, Dänemark – 10.6.1949 Lillehammer, Norwegen). Als Tochter eines Archäologen wuchs U. in Kristiania (Oslo) auf. Gegen die erzwungene Büroarbeit behauptete sie ihre lit. Begabung. Nach einem Skandal um den Zeitroman »Jenny« über eine an gesellschaftlichen Konventionen und Liebesenttäuschung scheiternde Künstlerin (1911) konnte sie dank eines Stipendiums nach Paris und Rom reisen. Seit 1912 beteiligte sie sich an der Diskussion um die »Frauenfrage…

Pontoppidan

(226 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[English Version] Pontoppidan, Henrik (24.7.1857 Fredericia, Jütland – 21.8.1943 Charlottenlund bei Kopenhagen). Der Pfarrerssohn wandte sich früh vom Christentum ab. Ein 1874 begonnenes Ingenieurstudium in Kopenhagen brach er 1879 ab und lebte, nach Tätigkeiten als Journalist und Lehrer an einer Volkshochschule, ab 1881 als freier Schriftsteller. In rascher Folge erschienen Novellen und kleine Romane mit sozialkrit. Schilderungen aus dem jütländischen Dorfleben. P.s klarer, unsentimental-ironische…

Strindberg

(467 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[English Version] Strindberg, (Johan) August (22.1.1849 Stockholm – 14.5.1912 ebd.). Aufgewachsen in verarmten kleinbürgerlichen Verhältnissen, die er – wie weite Teile seines Lebens – in stark fiktionalisierten autobiogr. Texten geschildert hat (Der Sohn einer Magd, 1886, gedr. 1886–1909), arbeitete S. nach und neben abgebrochenen Versuchen einer Schauspiel- und Universitätsausbildung und an wechselnden Wohnorten (u.a. Stockholm, Paris, Kopenhagen, Berlin) als Kritiker, Übersetzer, freier Schriftst…

Strindberg, Johan August

(604 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] ( Jan 22, 1849, Stockholm – May 14, 1912, Stockholm) grew up in impoverished lower middle class circumstances, which – like extensive areas of his life – he depicted in strongly fictionalized autobiographical texts ( Tjänstekvinnans son, 1886, publ. 1913; ET: Son of a Servant, 1966). During and after discontinued attempts at a theatrical or university education, Strindberg lived in various cities (including Stockholm, Paris, Copenhagen, and Berlin), working as a critic, translator, freelance writer, dramaturge, and theatri…

Ibsen, Henrik

(559 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (Mar 20, 1828, Skien, Norway – May 23, 1906, Oslo). Along with J.A. Strindberg, Ibsen founded modern drama. Ibsen, whose father went bankrupt, broke with his family early on. Already during his apprenticeship as a pharmacist, he turned to the theater. After political-revolutionary beginnings ( Catilina, 1848) and contact with socialist movements, Ibsen wrote romantic nationalistic dramas ( Lady Inger of Oestraat [ Fru Inger til Østeraad, 1855]) for the theater in Bergen, where he was artistic director (1851–1857). After failures as director of t…

Pontoppidan, Henrik

(265 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (Jul 24, 1857, Fredericia, Jutland – Aug 21, 1943, Charlottenlund, near Copenhagen). Though a pastor’s son, Pontoppidan soon turned his back on Christianity. He began studying engineering in Copenhagen in 1874 but left his studies in 1881 to live as a freelance writer. In quick succession, he published a series of novellas and short novels embodying social criticism of village life in Jutland. His clear, unsentimentally ironic style increasingly combined the naturalistic social re…

Jacobsen, Jens Peter

(109 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (Apr 7, 1847, Thisted – Apr 30, 1885, Thisted), Danish writer. Jacobsen based his naturalistic writing and his emphatic atheism on Darwinism. His novels ( Fru Marie Grubbe, 1876; ET: Marie Grubbe: A Lady of the Seventeenth Century, 1917, 21975); Niels Lyhne, 1880; ET: Niels Lyhne, 1919), short stories ( Pesten i Bergamo, 1882; ET: “The Plague of Bergamo,” in: Mogens and Other Tales, 1921), and poetry tended toward impressionistic decadence and a melancholy picture of a world without God. He was an inspiration for European modernism, especiall…

Undset, Sigrid

(306 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (May 20, 1882, Kalundborg, Denmark – Jun 10, 1949, Lillehammer, Norway), the daughter of an archaeologist, grew up in Kristiana (Oslo). Forced for economic reasons to work as a secretary, she nevertheless asserted her literary gifts. After a scandal surrounding her novel Jenny (1911; ET in The Unknown Sigrid Undset, 2001), a contemporary novel about a woman painter brought to suicide by social conventions and romantic crises, a grant enabled her to travel to Paris and Rome. After 1912 she took part in the discussion of the issue…

Tegnér, Esaias

(334 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (Nov 13, 1782, Kyrkerud, Värmland – Nov 2, 1846, Växjö), the son of a pastor, was appointed professor of aesthetics at Lund in 1810; in 1812 he was appointed to the chair of Greek studies. After publication of patriotic poetry ( Svea, 1811), in 1818 he was made a member of the Swedish Academy, for which he wrote numerous works. After classicistic beginnings, along with reflections on aesthetics and verse narratives (including Nattvardsbarnen, 1820; ET: “Children of the Lord’s Supper,” by Longfellow, publ. in his Ballads and Other Poems in 1842; Axel, 1822; ET: Axel, 1915),…

Runeberg, Johan Ludvig

(212 words)

Author(s): Detering, Heinrich
[German Version] (Feb 5, 1804, Jakobstad, Finland – May 6, 1877, Porvoo, Finland). Along with Elias Lönnroth, Runeberg, who wrote in Swedish, is considered the founder of a distinct Finnish literature. After studying classical philology at Turku (Åbo), he lived in Helsinki (Helsingfors) and later as a teacher in Porvoo (Borgå), where he was soon honored as a national poet. He wrote classicistic plays ( Kungarne på Salamis, 1863), hymns, and lyric and epic poetry; his hexameter epic Elgskyttarne (1832, continuations to 1844) was hailed as a national event. His 1848 epic Fänrik Ståls säg…