Georg Engel

Georg Julius Leopold Engel (b 29 October 1866 in Greifswald; d. 19 October [1931 in Berlin[1] ) was a successful German writer, dramatist and literary critic. His novels appeared in large print runs. He also used the pseudonym Johannes Jörgensen.[2]

Life

Engel spent his youth in Breslau. After studying philosophy and history in Berlin (1887 - 1890), he worked as an art and theatre critic for the Berliner Tageblatt newspaper and from 1891 he was active as a writer in Berlin.[1]

In his novel Hann Klüth, der Philosoph (1905) and in his collection of novellas Die Leute von Moorluke (1910), set in Greifswald and surrounds, he portrayed lively and life-affirming north German characters. He wrote many dramas, but they are no longer performed. Engel was the President of the Imperial Union of German Literatur (Reichsverbandes des deutschen Schrifttums). This organisation provided social security for independent authors. He acquired recognition and awards of merit for this.

During the National Socialist period, his work was considered undesirable as Engel was non-Aryan by the state's definition. The commemorative plaque was removed from the house in Greifswald where he was born, his gravestone in Elisenhain (a forest in Greifswald) was knocked over. Some of Engel's books were banned, removed from libraries and burnt.[3] His grave was fixed after 1945.

Works

Fiction[2]

Drama[2]

Films based on his works

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 "Georg Engel". Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 "Georg Engel". Katalog der deutschen Nationalbibliothek. Retrieved 19 August 2013.
  3. "Verbannte Bücher". Berlin.de. Retrieved 21 February 2014.

External links

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