This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0001915263 Reproduction Date:
Monika Maron (born on 3 June 1941 in Berlin) is a German author, formerly of the German Democratic Republic. She moved in 1951 from West to East Berlin with her stepfather, Karl Maron, the GDR Minister of the Interior. She studied theatre and spent time as a directing assistant and as a journalist. In the late 1970s, she began writing full-time in East Berlin. She left the GDR in 1988 with a three-year visa. After living in Hamburg, Germany, until 1992, she returned to a reunited Berlin, where she currently lives and writes. Her works deal to a large degree with confrontation with the past and explore the threats posed both by memory and isolation. Her prose is sparse, bleak, and lonely, conveying the sensitivity and desperation of her narrators. In 1992, she was distinguished with the renowned Kleist Prize, awarded annually to prominent German authors, and, in 2003, with the Friedrich Hölderlin Prize.[1]
London, Germany, Paris, United Kingdom, Amsterdam
Berlin, Germany, Holy Roman Empire, Bremen (state), Hanseatic League
Berlin, North Rhine-Westphalia, Hamburg, France, United Kingdom
Thomas Mann, Literature, Günter Grass, Sturm und Drang, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Rhineland-Palatinate, Friedrich Dürrenmatt, German literature, German language, Volker Schlöndorff
Socialist realism, Berlin Wall, East Germany, James Joyce, Franz Kafka