Ricarda Huch
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ricarda Huch (1864-07-18 - 1947-11-17) was a German writer and poet. She was born in Braunschweig and died in Schönberg (Taunus) [today it belongs to Kronberg]. She also used the pseudonym Richard Hugo. She prepared for university work privately and studied at Zürich, where she took her doctor's degree in 1891.[1]
Ricarda Huch was a member of the "Preußische Akademie der Künste", but left this institution in 1933 when the nationalsocialists took over and excluded Alfred Döblin.
[edit] Publications
- E. A. Regener, Ricarda Huch, eine Studie (Leipzig, 1904)
- Elfriede Gottlieb, Ricarda Huch, ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der deutschen Epik (1914)
[edit] Texts
- Erinnerungen von Ludolf Ursleu dem Jüngeren 1893
- Fra Celeste 1899
- Die Blütezeit der Romantik. 1899
- Ausbreitung und Verfall der Romantik. 1902
- Aus der Triumphgasse. 1902
- Vita somnium breve 1903 (Titel ab 1913: Michael Unger)
- Von den Königen und der Krone 1904
- Die Geschichten von Garibaldi. 1906
- Menschen und Schicksale aus dem Risorgimento. 1908
- Der letzte Sommer. (Briefroman) 1910
- Das Leben des Grafen Federigo Confalonieri. 1910
- Der große Krieg in Deutschland. Three volumes, 1914
- Natur und geist als die Wurzeln des Lebens und der Kunst. 1914
- Wallenstein. 1915
- Das Judengrab. 1916
- Luthers Glaube. 1916
- Der Fall Deruga. (Krimi) 1917; online: http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/17169
- Der Sinn der Heiligen Schrift. 1919
- Michael Bakunin und die Anarchie. 1923
- Gesammelte Gedichte. 1929
- Deutsche Geschichte. 1934-49
- Frühling in der Schweiz, Jugenderinnerungen 1938
- Herbstfeuer. 1944
- Urphänomene. 1946
[edit] Elocution
ə | This article contains nonstandard pronunciation information which should be rewritten using the International Phonetic Alphabet. Please see Wikipedia:Manual of Style (pronunciation) for help. |
- Her name is pronounced "Hoog,"[2] which rhymes with "Moog."
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.