Ulrike Draesner

Ulrike Draesner (2014)

Ulrike Draesner (born 1962 in Munich) is a German author.

Life and work

The daughter of an architect, Ulrike Draesner grew up in Munich, Germany. She received a Bavarian State scholarship for the best performing student at Gymnasium (Sixth Form) from the Stiftung Maximilianeum. She read Law, English and German literature as well as Philosophy in Munich, Salamanca, and Oxford. She worked as a lecturer Institute for German Philology from 1989 to 1993. In 1992, she received her doctorate for a dissertation on the Middle High German romance Parzival.

In 1993, Ulrike Draesner quit her academic career in order to work as a full-time author. She has lived in Berlin since 1994, writing both poetry and prose. Her novel Vorliebe (2010) is a romance novel. In 2014, her groundbreaking novel Sieben Sprünge vom Rand der Welt was published and a celebrated success. Draesner frequently collaborates in cross-media projects with other artists and merges literature with sculpting, performing arts, and music. She became a member of the PEN-Zentrum Deutschland in 1999. In 2010, she was elected to a Fellowship at the North Rhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences, Humanities and the Arts. She is a regular guest at international literary festivals. Her work has been translated into numerous languages. During the academic year 2015/16, Ulrike Draesner will be a Visiting Fellow at New College, Oxford, working with Karen Leeder, leader of the Mediating Modernity project,[1] on topics of bilingualism, poetry translation and negotiating identity as a Writer in residence at the Faculty for Medieval and Modern Languages at the University of Oxford.[2] A symposium on her and her work is planned for April 2016.

Publications

Single author titles
Editor
Literary translations

Awards (selection)

References

  1. Information on the Knowledge Exchange partnership award for Karen Leeder
  2. News bulletin of the Faculty for Medieval and Modern Languages 24 April 2015
  3. Poetikprofessur an der Universität Bamberg

Secondary sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.