Hans Magnus Enzensberger
(Kaufbeuren, 1929) German writer whose production was part of a satirical trend that links him to the initial work of Bertolt Brecht, excelling in his scathing and ironic criticism of conventionalisms social.
Hans Magnus Enzensberger
During the Second World War, in 1944 and 1945, he was in the German people's militia (Volkssturm).After the conflict, he studied Germanic, literature, philosophy and languages in Erlangen, Hamburg, Freiburg and Paris, where he received his doctorate in 1955.Until 1957 he was editor of the South German Radio in Stuttgart, then editor and temporarily visiting professor at the School Ulm Superior Technique.Later he settled in Norway and between 1965 and 1979 he edited the magazine Kursbuch .
Member of Group 47, which also included the poet Paul Celan and prominent novelists such as Günter Grass, Heinrich Böll, Siegfried Lenz and Uwe Johnson, for many years he was considered a rebel for his aggressive poems and texts in prose.Enzensberger himself explained it, expressing that there are situations that "cannot be presented in any other way." Defense of the wolves (1957) is a collection of poems divided into "kind", "sad" and "angry", with great musicality, with frequent use of alliteration, inclusion of urban slang and barbarisms.
National Language (1960), his second collection of poems, is very close to the previous one on the subject, although it takes on a more relaxed form.These two works, plus Writing for the Blind (1964), were compiled in Poetry for those who do not read poetry (1970).Later, he produced another collection of poems, Die Furie des Verschwindens ( The fury of despair , 1980) and, above all, The sinking of the Titanic (1978).
Among his essays, critics of contemporaneity, it is worth mentioning Details (1962), Politics and crime (1964), Deutschland, Deutschland unter anderem ( Germany, Germany among other things , 1967) and The short summer of anarchy (1972), a biography of Buenaventura Durruti.Hans Magnus Enzensberger is also the author of novels ( Requiem for a Romantic Woman , 1989) and of plays ( Interrogation in Havana , 1970; The Philanthropist , 1982).
In 1997 his work The Devil of Numbers was a bestseller.Its protagonist, a boy named Robert, was also the main character in Where have you been, Robert? (1999).In 1999 Zigzag appeared, a compilation of his newspaper articles.In 2008 he won the Prince of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities.
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