Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Ingeborg Bachmann

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Nationality
  
Austrian

Education
  
University of Vienna

Role
  
Poet


Name
  
Ingeborg Bachmann

Movies
  
Malina

Ingeborg Bachmann voicesinwartimeorgsitesdefaultfilesimagesbac

Born
  
25 June 1926, Klagenfurt, Austria (
1926-06-25
)

Notable awards
  
Prize of the Group 471953Georg Buchner Prize1964Anton Wildgans Prize1971

Parents
  
Mathias Bachmann, Olga Bachmann

Books
  
Malina, The book of Franza & Requiem, Darkness Spoken, Anrufung des grossen b, Die Wahrheit ist dem M

Similar People
  

Died
  
17 October 1973 (aged 47) Rome, Italy

Pen name
  
Ruth Keller

Language
  
German

Notable works
  
Die gestundete Zeit (1953, "Time Deferred") Anrufung des großen Bären (1956, "Invocation of Ursa Major") Malina (1971)

Partner
  
Paul Celan (1950–52, 1957), Max Frisch (1958–63)

Zodiac Sign
  
Cancer

Ingeborg bachmann reads an die sonne a paean to the sun 1961 subtitled


Ingeborg Bachmann (25 June 1926 – 17 October 1973) was an Austrian poet and author.

Contents

Ingeborg Bachmann Mak i pami o zwizku miosnym poetw Ingeborg

Ingeborg bachmann reads alle tage every day 1961


Biography

Ingeborg Bachmann Utopie einer Liebe Ingeborg Bachmanns Kriegstagebuch

Bachmann was born in Klagenfurt, in the Austrian state of Carinthia, the daughter of a headmaster. She studied philosophy, psychology, German philology, and law at the universities of Innsbruck, Graz, and Vienna. In 1949, she received her Doctor of Philosophy from the University of Vienna with her dissertation titled "The Critical Reception of the Existential Philosophy of Martin Heidegger"; her thesis adviser was Victor Kraft.

Ingeborg Bachmann IngeborgBachmannjpg

After graduating, Bachmann worked as a scriptwriter and editor at the Allied radio station Rot-Weiss-Rot, a job that enabled her to obtain an overview of contemporary literature and also supplied her with a decent income, making possible proper literary work. Furthermore, her first radio dramas were published by the station. Her literary career was enhanced by contact with Hans Weigel (littérateur and sponsor of young post-war literature) and the legendary literary circle known as Gruppe 47, whose members also included Ilse Aichinger, Paul Celan, Heinrich Böll, Marcel Reich-Ranicki and Günter Grass. She won the Prize of Group 47 in 1953 for her poetry collection Die gestundete Zeit.

Ingeborg Bachmann Ingeborg Bachmann Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

In 1953, she moved to Rome, Italy, where she spent the large part of the following years working on poems, essays and short stories as well as opera libretti in collaboration with Hans Werner Henze, which soon brought with them international fame and numerous awards. Her relationship with the Swiss author Max Frisch (1911–1991) influenced the depiction of the second protagonist in Frisch's 1964 novel Gantenbein upon her. His infidelity, and their separation in 1962, had a deep impact on Bachmann.

Ingeborg Bachmann Ingeborg Bachmann39s Stay a poem Gypsyscarlett39s Weblog

On the night of 25/26 September 1973 a fire occurred in her bedroom, and she was taken to the Roman Sant' Eugenio hospital for treatment. (Local police concluded that the blaze was caused by a cigarette.) During her stay, she experienced withdrawal symptoms complicated from barbiturate substance abuse. The doctors treating her were not aware of this habit, and it may have contributed to her subsequent death on 17 October 1973. She is buried at the Annabichl cemetery in Klagenfurt.

Work and reception

During her lifetime, Bachmann was known mostly for her two collections of poetry, Die gestundete Zeit and Anrufung des Grossen Bären. After her death, she became popular among feminist readers. Feminist scholars' engagement with her work after her death led to a wave of scholarship that also drew attention to her prose work.

Bachmann's literary work focuses on themes like personal boundaries, establishment of the truth, and philosophy of language, the latter in the tradition of Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein. Many of her prose works represent the struggles of women to survive and to find a voice in post-war Austrian society. She also addresses the histories of imperialism and fascism, in particular, the persistence of imperialist ideas in the present. Her doctoral dissertation expresses her growing disillusionment with Heideggerian Existentialism, which was in part resolved through her growing interest in Wittgenstein, whose Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus significantly influenced her relationship to language.

The Ingeborg Bachmann Prize

The Ingeborg Bachmann Prize, awarded annually in Klagenfurt since 1977, is named after her.

Poetry collections

  • 1953: Die gestundete Zeit
  • 1956: Anrufung des Grossen Bären
  • 2000: Ich weiß keine bessere Welt. (Unpublished Poems)
  • 2006: Darkness Spoken: The Collected Poems of Ingeborg Bachmann. translator Peter Filkins, Zephyr Press, ISBN 9780939010844
  • Radio plays

  • 1952: Ein Geschäft mit Träumen
  • 1955: Die Zikaden
  • 1959: Der gute Gott von Manhattan (won the Hörspielpreis der Kriegsblinden in 1959)
  • Libretti

  • 1960: Der Prinz von Homburg
  • 1965: Der junge Lord
  • Collections of short stories

  • 1961: Das dreißigste Jahr
  • 1972: Simultan/Three Paths to the Lake
  • Novel

  • 1971: Malina (Translated into English by Philip Boehm. Holmes & Meier, 1999.)
  • Unfinished novels

  • 1955:Todesarten/The Book of Franza & Requiem for Fanny Goldmann (novel-cycle project)
  • Essays and public speeches

  • 1959: Die Wahrheit ist dem Menschen zumutbar (poetological speech at a German presentation of awards,)
  • 1955: Frankfurter Vorlesungen (lecture on problems of contemporary literature)
  • Letters

  • Ingeborg Bachmann-Paul Celan: Correspondence (letters between Ingeborg and Paul Celan, published 2010 by Seagull Books)
  • Letters to Felician (letters to an imaginary correspondent, written 1945, published posthumously). Edited & translated into English by Damion Searls. Green Integer Books, 2004.
  • War Diary, Translated by Michael Mitchell, Seagull Books, 2011, ISBN 9780857420084
  • References

    Ingeborg Bachmann Wikipedia