Gerhard Fritsch
Appearance
Gerhard Fritsch (28 March 1924 – 22 March 1969) was an Austrian novelist and poet.[1] He achieved considerable success with his first novel Moos auf den Steinen (Moss on the Stones). It was later adapted into a film. Fritsch's second novel, Fasching (Carnival) was published in 1969, the year in which he committed suicide, just six days before his 45th birthday.
In 1961, he translated W. H. Auden's long poem For the Time Being: A Christmas Oratorio into German under the title Hier und jetzt. Ein Weihnachtsoratorium.[2]
Further reading
[edit]- Augustinus P. Dierick: “Politics, the Elegiac, and the Carnivalesque: Gerhard Fritsch’s Moos auf den Steinen and Fasching.” Seminar, 38:1 (February 2002).
References
[edit]- ^ Modern Austrian Literature Through the Lens of Adaptation
- ^ Auden, W. H. Hier und jetzt. Ein Weihnachtsoratorium. Translated by Gerhard Fritsch, Otto Müller, 1961.
Categories:
- 1924 births
- 1969 deaths
- 1969 suicides
- 20th-century Austrian novelists
- 20th-century Austrian poets
- Austrian male poets
- German-language poets
- Austrian male novelists
- 20th-century Austrian male writers
- Austrian military personnel of World War II
- Austrian military personnel who died by suicide
- Luftwaffe personnel of World War II
- German prisoners of war in World War II held by the Soviet Union
- Austrian writer stubs
- Suicides by hanging in Austria