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Horst Bienek

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Name
  
Horst Bienek

Role
  
Novelist

Movies
  
The Cell, Heureka


Horst Bienek Horst Bienek Wikipedia the free encyclopedia


Died
  
December 7, 1990, Munich, Germany

Books
  
Die erste Polka, Die Zelle, Erde und Feuer

Awards
  
German Film Award for Best New Direction

Similar People
  
Christa Reinig, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, S Ansky

Horst Bienek (May 7, 1930, Gleiwitz – December 7, 1990, Munich) was a German novelist and poet.

Contents

Horst Bienek Horst Bienek Profile BioData Updates and Latest Pictures

Life

Horst Bienek Magyarul Bbelben irodalmi antolgia Bienek Horst

Born in Gleiwitz, Upper Silesia, Germany (today Gliwice, Poland), Bienek was forced to leave there in 1945, when Germans were expelled from Silesia. He resettled in the eastern part of Germany. For a time, he was a student of Bertolt Brecht. In 1951, he was arrested by NKVD and sentenced in a show trial to 25 years of labour for "anti-Soviet incitement" and alleged espionage on behalf of the United States, and sent to a Gulag concentration camp in Vorkuta. When he was released as the result of an amnesty in 1955, he settled in West Germany. Much of his writing addressed the theme of his uprooting from his Upper Silesian homeland

Horst Bienek Diskussion Wie war Horst Bienek privat Wochenblatt

Although homosexual, his autobiographical writings never discussed openly his own homosexuality, and his novels only on occasion allude gently to homosexual attraction.

Bienek died in Munich in 1990 from AIDS.

Work

Bienek was the winner of numerous prizes, including the Nelly Sachs Prize in 1981. His best-known work is the four-volume series of novels dealing with the prelude to World War II and the war itself, Gleiwitz, Eine oberschlesische Chronik in vier Romanen.

Three of his works were adapted for film:

  • Die Zelle (1970)
  • Die erste Polka (1979)
  • Schloß Königswald (1987).
  • Bienek's four novel have all been translated into English:

    The First Polka (1978)

    September Light (1986)

    The Cell (1973)

    Time Without Bells (1988)

    References

    Horst Bienek Wikipedia