Dietrich Schwanitz

Dietrich Schwanitz (April 23, 1940 – December 17, 2004) was a German writer and literary scholar. He became known to larger audiences after publishing the bestselling campus novel Der Campus in 1995.

Life

Schwanitz's parents were teaching living in the northern Ruhr area. In the late phase of World War II his mother send him with help of the Red Cross to Switzerland to escape the bombing raids in war torn Germany. In Switzerland Schwanitz stayed for six years with Mennonite mountain farmers rather isolated from society and without attending a school. He returned to his parents in 1950 and school director who took a liking in him (seeing him as a modern "Kaspar Hauser") got him accepted directly into a gymnasium (highschool) and helped him to catch up with the curriculum. Schwanitz graduated ultimately as best of his class and went on to pursue English studies, history and philosophy at universities in Münster, London, Philadelphia and Freiburg. In 1971 he received his PhD from the Albert Ludwig University in Freiburg for thesis on George Bernard Shaw. In 1978 he became a tenured professor for English studies at the University of Hamburg where he stayed until his early retirement in 1997 due to health issues.[1][2]

After his retirement Schwanitz moved to Southern Germany. He continued to write and in 2001 he purchased the Salmen in Hartheim am Rhein, a restaurant with a theater stage. Schwanitz planned to turn it into acultural center and had its theater room painted with Shakespearean motives. He was found dead in the Salmen in late December 2004. The police investigation concluded that there was no indication of a crime or suicide and that he had died of hypothermia. Originally it was reported that Schwanitz was suffering from Parkinson's disease but after his death it became known that in fact he had suffered from Huntington's disease instead. He had been married with one son and one daughter.[3][2]

Work

Schwanitz main academic work during his tenure at the University of Hamburg was applying system theory to literary theory and he published two books on that subject. First his main work Systemtheorie und Literatur. Ein neues Paradigma ("System Theory and Literature. An New Paradigm", 1990) which was later followed by Shakespeare und die Liebe. Ein Beispiel für die Applikation der Systemtheorie auf die Literatur. ("Shakespeare and Love. An Example for the Application of System Theory to Literature", 1996). He also published an introduction in English studies and a cultural history of the English speaking world.[2]

Schwanitz was popular with students as a teacher, in 1980 he found the University Players an English theater group that still existed long after he had left the university. It garnered attraction in 1988 when it performed the play "MacBarsch" alluding to Uwe Barschel the leading figure in Waterkantgate, one West Germany's biggest political scandals.[4]

In 1995 Schwanitz published Der Campus, which is a campus novel, a genre that didn't really exist in German at the time. It quickly became a bestseller in German speaking countries and was adapted into a move of the same name in 1998.[5]

Books

Notes

  1. Philipp Blom: Dietrich Schwanitz - English professor who wrote a bestseller. The Independent, January 2005
  2. 1 2 3 Bestsellerautor tot aufgefunden. Süddeutsche Zeitung, 17 May 2010 (publication date given on the newspaper's website, presumably correct date is late December 2004, German)
  3. Bettina Schulze: Gasthaus "Zum Salmen": Wie Shakespeare nach Hartheim kam. Badische Zeitung, 10 September 2011 (German)
  4. Maike Schiller: Professor, Autor, Uni-Kritiker. 23 December 2004 (German)
  5. Stephen M. Brockmann: The Politics of German Comedy. German Studies Review, Vol. 23, No. 1 (Feb., 2000), pp. 33-51, in particular pp. 34, 39-41 (JSTOR)

References


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