Martin Mosebach
Martin Mosebach (born 31 July 1951, in Frankfurt am Main) is a German writer.
Biography
He has published novels, stories, and collections of poems, written scripts for several films, opera libretti, theatre and radio plays. His first major non-fiction work is the book The 21 - A Journey into the Land of Coptic Martyrs detailing his visit to Egypt to examine the lives of the 21 Coptic martyrs beheaded by ISIS in 2015.[1][2]
The German Academy for Language and Literature praised him for "combining stylistic splendour with original storytelling that demonstrates a humorous awareness of history."
He is a Traditionalist Roman Catholic. Among Mosebach's works translated into English is The Heresy of Formlessness, a collection of essays on the Latin language Tridentine Mass and its replacement by the vernacular Mass of Paul VI, as viewed from the perspective of a Catholic author and intellectual. It has been published in the United States by Ignatius Press. The book argues for a return to the Tridentine Mass, about which the 2007 motu proprio Summorum Pontificum declared that, rather than a "rite", it is a form of the one Roman Rite, stating also that the 1962 Roman Missal, which contained its final form, had never been formally abrogated.
Other works include The Turkish Woman, The Tremor, The Long Night and Prince of Mist, in which the author examines the motives behind man's eternal search for a meaning.
Awards
Mosebach was awarded the Kleist Prize in 2002.[3] In 2007, he was awarded the Georg Büchner Prize.[4]
Publications
The following is a partial list of publications written by Mosebach:
Novels
- 1983: Das Bett (The Bed) ISBN 3-423-13069-5
- 1985: Ruppertshain 3-423-13159-4
- 1992: Westend ISBN 3-423-13240-X
- 1999: Die Türkin (The Turkish Woman) ISBN 3-7466-1793-6
- 2000: Eine lange Nacht (A Long Night) ISBN 3-7466-1974-2
- 2001: Der Nebelfürst (Prince of the Mist) ISBN 3-423-13119-5
- 2005: Das Beben (The Tremor) ISBN 978-3-446-20661-8
- 2007: Der Mond und das Mädchen (The Moon and the Maiden) ISBN 978-3-446-20916-9
- 2010: What Was Before (Was davor geschah) ISBN 978-3-446-23562-5
- 2014: Das Blutbuchenfest ISBN 978-3-446-24479-5
Short story collections
- 1995 Das Kissenbuch : Gedichte und Zeichnungen ISBN 3-458-19127-5
- 1995 Stilleben mit wildem Tier: Erzählungen ISBN 3-8270-0130-7
- 1996 Das Grab Der Pulcinellen: Erzählungen, Pasticci, Phantasien ISBN 3-423-12863-1
- 1997 Die Schöne Gewohnheit zu Leben: eine italienische Reise ISBN 978-3-8270-0934-0
- 2008 Stadt der wilden Hunde: Nachrichten aus dem alltäglichen Indien ISBN 3-446-23026-2
Essays
- 2002 Häresie der Formlosigkeit. Die römische Liturgie und ihr Feind (The Heresy of Formlessness) ISBN 978-3-446-20869-8
- 2002 Mein Frankfurt ISBN 3-458-34571-X
- 2006 Schöne Literatur: Essays ISBN 978-3-446-20711-0
- 2012 Der Ultramontane ISBN 978-3-86744-215-2
Non-fiction
- 2019 The 21: A Journey into the Land of Coptic Martyrs ISBN 978-0-87486-839-5
References
- ^ Mosebach, Martin (2019). The 21. Plough Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87486-839-5.
- ^ "Lots of Coptic clergy were rubbing shoulders with members of the Bruderhof". The Tablet. Retrieved 2019-03-15.
- ^ "2002 Martin Mosebach". kleist.org (in German). Retrieved 26 June 2022.
- ^ Spiegel, Hubert (8 June 2007). "Büchner-Preisträger Mosebach: Brillanz, die aus der Fülle kommt". FAZ.NET (in German). Retrieved 26 June 2022.
External links
- Mosebach Winner of Büchnerpreis
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- 1923 Adam Karrillon and Arnold Mendelssohn
- 1924 Alfred Bock and Paul Thesing
- 1925 Wilhelm Michel and Rudolf Koch
- 1926 Christian Heinrich Kleukens and Wilhelm Petersen
- 1927 Kasimir Edschmid and Johannes Bischoff
- 1928 Richard Hoelscher and Well Habicht
- 1929 Carl Zuckmayer and Adam Antes
- 1930 Nikolaus Schwarzkopf and Johannes Lippmann
- 1931 Alexander Posch and Hans Simon
- 1932 Albert H. Rausch and Adolf Bode
- 1933–1944 not given
- 1945 Hans Schiebelhuth
- 1946 Fritz Usinger
- 1947 Anna Seghers
- 1948 Hermann Heiss
- 1949 Carl Gunschmann
- 1950 Elisabeth Langgässer
- 1951 Gottfried Benn
- 1952 not given
- 1953 Ernst Kreuder
- 1954 Martin Kessel
- 1955 Marie Luise Kaschnitz
- 1956 Karl Krolow
- 1957 Erich Kästner
- 1958 Max Frisch
- 1959 Günter Eich
- 1960 Paul Celan
- 1961 Hans Erich Nossack
- 1962 Wolfgang Koeppen
- 1963 Hans Magnus Enzensberger
- 1964 Ingeborg Bachmann
- 1965 Günter Grass
- 1966 Wolfgang Hildesheimer
- 1967 Heinrich Böll
- 1968 Golo Mann
- 1969 Helmut Heißenbüttel
- 1970 Thomas Bernhard
- 1971 Uwe Johnson
- 1972 Elias Canetti
- 1973 Peter Handke
- 1974 Hermann Kesten
- 1975 Manès Sperber
- 1976 Heinz Piontek
- 1977 Reiner Kunze
- 1978 Hermann Lenz
- 1979 Ernst Meister
- 1980 Christa Wolf
- 1981 Martin Walser
- 1982 Peter Weiss
- 1983 Wolfdietrich Schnurre
- 1984 Ernst Jandl
- 1985 Heiner Müller
- 1986 Friedrich Dürrenmatt
- 1987 Erich Fried
- 1988 Albert Drach
- 1989 Botho Strauß
- 1990 Tankred Dorst
- 1991 Wolf Biermann
- 1992 George Tabori
- 1993 Peter Rühmkorf
- 1994 Adolf Muschg
- 1995 Durs Grünbein
- 1996 Sarah Kirsch
- 1997 H. C. Artmann
- 1998 Elfriede Jelinek
- 1999 Arnold Stadler
- 2000 Volker Braun
- 2001 Friederike Mayröcker
- 2002 Wolfgang Hilbig
- 2003 Alexander Kluge
- 2004 Wilhelm Genazino
- 2005 Brigitte Kronauer
- 2006 Oskar Pastior
- 2007 Martin Mosebach
- 2008 Josef Winkler
- 2009 Walter Kappacher
- 2010 Reinhard Jirgl
- 2011 Friedrich Christian Delius
- 2012 Felicitas Hoppe
- 2013 Sibylle Lewitscharoff
- 2014 Jürgen Becker
- 2015 Rainald Goetz
- 2016 Marcel Beyer
- 2017 Jan Wagner
- 2018 Terézia Mora
- 2019 Lukas Bärfuss
- 2020 Elke Erb
- 2021 Clemens J. Setz
- 2022 Emine Sevgi Özdamar
- 2023: Lutz Seiler
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