Wolfgang Hilbig
Wolfgang Hilbig (31 August 1941 – 2 June 2007) was a German writer and poet.[1]
Life
Wolfgang Hilbig was born in Meuselwitz, Germany.[2] His grandfather had emigrated from Biłgoraj (Congress Poland, Russian Empire) before the First World War. In 1942, his father was reported missing at Stalingrad, leaving behind Hilbig and his mother.
After his schooling in his home town, Hilbig began to work at a boring mill. Later, after military service, he worked as a tool maker and in assembly construction at the Meuselwitz lignite mine.
In 1978, Hilbig moved to East Berlin, and in 1979 he became an independent writer. In 1985, he left the GDR with a travel visa and moved to West Germany.
He lived in Berlin after the fall of the Berlin Wall and married writer and translator Natascha Wodin in 1994. They had one daughter and divorced in 2002.[3]
Hilbig died from cancer in 2007 and is buried in the Dorotheenstädtischen Cemetery in Berlin.
Work
At first Hilbig favoured poetry, but his works remained widely unpublished in the GDR. He received attention from the West however, as a result of his poems in the anthology Cries for Help from the Other Side (1978). His first volume of poetry, Absence (1979) was published by S. Fischer Verlag in Frankfurt am Main. For this, Hilbig was fined.
At the end of the 1970s, Hilbig gave up his day job and began to work exclusively as a writer. With the support of Franz Fühmann, a few of his poems were printed in a GDR newspaper for the first time. His prose anthology, Unterm Neomond (1982) was published by S. Fischer, followed by Stimme Stimme (1983), a prose and poetry anthology published by Reclam in Leipzig.
In 1985 Hilbig gained a visa for West Germany valid until 1990. During this time he published not only further poetry and prose, but also his first novel, Eine Übertragung (1989), which was received well by literary critics.
Even after reunification, the main themes of his work remained the dual-existence of working and writing in the GDR and the search for individuality. His further works include: his second novel, »Ich« (1993); his collections of short stories, such as Die Kunde von den Bäumen (1992) and Die Arbeit an den Öfen (1994); and his third novel Das Provisorium (2000). Autobiographical themes are often prevalent.
Awards
- 1983 Hanau Brothers-Grimm-Prize
- 1989 Ingeborg Bachmann Prize for Eine Übertragung
- 1992: Berlin Literature Prize
- 1993 Brandenburg Literature Prize
- 1997 Fontane Prize (the Berlin Academy of Arts)
- 2002 Georg Büchner Prize
- 2002: Walter Bauer Prize
- 2002: Peter Huchel Prize for Poetry
- 2007: Erwin Strittmatter Prize
Bibliography
Novels
- Eine Übertragung (1989)
- »Ich« (1993). 'I', trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Seagull Books, 2015).
- Das Provisorium (2000). The Interim, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2021).
Shorter prose
- Unterm Neomond. Erzählungen (1982). Under the Neomoon, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2024).
- Der Brief. Drei Erzählungen (1985)
- Die Territorien der Seele. Fünf Prosastücke (1986). Territories of the Soul.
- Die Weiber (1987). The Females, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2018).
- Über den Tonfall. Drei Prosastücke (1990). On Intonation.
- Alte Abdeckerei. Erzählung (1991). Old Rendering Plant, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2017).
- Die Kunde von den Bäumen (1992). The Tidings of the Trees, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2018).
- Grünes grünes Grab. Erzählungen (1993)
- Die Arbeit an den Öfen. Erzählungen (1994)
- Der Schlaf der Gerechten. Erzählungen (2002). The Sleep of the Righteous, trans. Isabel Fargo Cole (Two Lines Press, 2015).
Poetry
- Abwesenheit (1979)
- Die Versprengung (1986)
- Bilder vom Erzählen (2001)
Miscellaneous
- Stimme Stimme. Gedichte und Prosa (1983)
- Das Meer in Sachsen. Prosa und Gedichte (1991)
- Zwischen den Paradiesen. Prosa Lyrik (1992)
- Abriß der Kritik. Frankfurter Poetikvorlesungen (1995)
- Sphinx. Texte aus dem Nachlass (2019, posthumous)
Selected compilations in German
- Aufbrüche. Erzählungen (1992)
- Die Angst vor Beethoven und andere Prosa (1997)
- Erzählungen (2002)
Compilations in English
- Territories of the Soul / On Intonation, trans. Matthew Spencer (Sublunary Editions, 2024)
Further reading
- „Büchner-Preisträger Wolfgang Hilbig gestorben.“ In: Die Welt, 2 June 2007, retrieved, 7 February 2011.
- "Chronologische Daten nach Andrea Jäger: Wolfgang Hilbig". In: dies.: Schriftsteller aus der DDR. Ausbürgerungen und Übersiedlungen von 1961 bis 1989. Autorenlexikon. Schriften zur Europa- und Deutschlandforschung. Hrsg. v. Paul Gerhard Klussmann [de]. Bd. 1. Frankfurt Main 1995. S. 201
- Matthias Biskupek [de]: "Von Lärchenau über Hilbig nach Berlin, Rezensionen u.a. zu Karen Lohse, Eine motivische Biographie". In: Eulenspiegel, 55./63. Jg., Nr. 7/08, ISSN 0423-5975, S. 77.
- Autorenporträt Wolfgang Hilbig im Literaturkalender von FAZ.NET, retrieved, 7 February 2011.
- Evelyn Finger [de]: LUCHS 185 – Die Jury von ZEIT und Radio Bremen stellt vor: Franz Fühmann und Jacky Gleich [de], „Anna, genannt Humpelhexe“. As of 29 February 2002, retrieved, 7 February 2011.
- Cornelia Geissler: "Der Unbehauste – Wolfgang Hilbig ist mit seinem neuen Roman im Westen angekommen". In: Berliner Zeitung, 19 February 2000, retrieved, 7 February 2011.
- Sächsische Akademie der Künste: Verstorbene Mitglieder. Retrieved, 6 February 2011.
- Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste: Nekrolog. Retrieved, 6 February 2011.
- Preismitteilung beim Land Brandenburg. Retrieved, 6 February 2011.
- Ursula März: "In der deutschen Vorhölle. Rezension des Romans Das Provisorium", in Die Zeit, Nr. 9/2000. Retrieved, 6 February 2011.
- Ingo Arend: "Die Anrufung des toten Gottes. Rezension des Romans Das Provisorium", in Freitag, 24 March 2000, retrieved, 6 February 2011.
- Dietmar Jacobsen: Die Wahrheit des Erfundenen. Rezension des Erzählungsbandes Der Schlaf der Gerechten. bei lyrikwelt.de, retrieved, 6 February 2011. Inhaltsangabe
References
- ^ "Wolfgang Hilbig". www.litencyc.com. Retrieved 20 October 2020.
- ^ Cooke, Paul (2000). Speaking the Taboo: A Study of the Work of Wolfgang Hilbig. Rodopi. ISBN 978-90-420-1542-5.
- ^ "ZEIT ONLINE | Lesen Sie zeit.de mit Werbung oder im PUR-Abo. Sie haben die Wahl". www.zeit.de. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
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- 1923 Adam Karrillon and Arnold Mendelssohn
- 1924 Alfred Bock and Paul Thesing
- 1925 Wilhelm Michel and Rudolf Koch
- 1926 Christian Heinrich Kleukens and Wilhelm Petersen
- 1927 Kasimir Edschmid and Johannes Bischoff
- 1928 Richard Hoelscher and Well Habicht
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- 1959 Günter Eich
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- 1965 Günter Grass
- 1966 Wolfgang Hildesheimer
- 1967 Heinrich Böll
- 1968 Golo Mann
- 1969 Helmut Heißenbüttel
- 1970 Thomas Bernhard
- 1971 Uwe Johnson
- 1972 Elias Canetti
- 1973 Peter Handke
- 1974 Hermann Kesten
- 1975 Manès Sperber
- 1976 Heinz Piontek
- 1977 Reiner Kunze
- 1978 Hermann Lenz
- 1979 Ernst Meister
- 1980 Christa Wolf
- 1981 Martin Walser
- 1982 Peter Weiss
- 1983 Wolfdietrich Schnurre
- 1984 Ernst Jandl
- 1985 Heiner Müller
- 1986 Friedrich Dürrenmatt
- 1987 Erich Fried
- 1988 Albert Drach
- 1989 Botho Strauß
- 1990 Tankred Dorst
- 1991 Wolf Biermann
- 1992 George Tabori
- 1993 Peter Rühmkorf
- 1994 Adolf Muschg
- 1995 Durs Grünbein
- 1996 Sarah Kirsch
- 1997 H. C. Artmann
- 1998 Elfriede Jelinek
- 1999 Arnold Stadler
- 2000 Volker Braun
- 2001 Friederike Mayröcker
- 2002 Wolfgang Hilbig
- 2003 Alexander Kluge
- 2004 Wilhelm Genazino
- 2005 Brigitte Kronauer
- 2006 Oskar Pastior
- 2007 Martin Mosebach
- 2008 Josef Winkler
- 2009 Walter Kappacher
- 2010 Reinhard Jirgl
- 2011 Friedrich Christian Delius
- 2012 Felicitas Hoppe
- 2013 Sibylle Lewitscharoff
- 2014 Jürgen Becker
- 2015 Rainald Goetz
- 2016 Marcel Beyer
- 2017 Jan Wagner
- 2018 Terézia Mora
- 2019 Lukas Bärfuss
- 2020 Elke Erb
- 2021 Clemens J. Setz
- 2022 Emine Sevgi Özdamar
- 2023: Lutz Seiler