Search

The Online Encyclopedia and Dictionary

 
     
 

Encyclopedia

Dictionary

Quotes

   
 

Max Frisch

Max Frisch (May 15, 1911 - April 4, 1991), was a Swiss architect, playwright and novelist, one of the most representative writers of the German literature after World War II .

He was born in 1911 in Zurich; his father was an architect. He enrolled at the University of Zurich in 1930 and began studying German literature, but had to abandon due to financial problems after the death of his father in 1932. Instead, he started working as a journalist and columnist for the "Neue Zürcher Zeitung" (NZZ), one of the major conservative newspapers in Switzerland. With the NZZ he would entertain a lifelong ambivalent love-hate relationship, for his own views were in stark contrast to the conservative views promulgated by this newspaper. In 1933 he travelled through eastern and south-eastern Europe, and in 1935 he visited Germany for the first time.

From 1936 to 1941 he studied architecture at the ETH Zurich. His first and still best-known project was in 1942, when he won the invitation of tenders for the construction of a public swimming bath in the river Limmat right in the middle of Zurich (the Lettenbad).

In 1947, he met Bertolt Brecht in Zurich. In 1951, he got a grant of the Rockefeller Trust and spent one year in the U.S. Since 1955, he worked exclusively as a freelance writer.

Max Frisch died of cancer on April 4, 1991 in Zurich. Together with Friedrich Dürrenmatt, Max Frisch is considered one of the most influential Swiss writers of the 20th century. He had been awarded honorary doctoral degrees of the Philipps University in Marburg, Germany, in 1962, Bard College (1980), the City University of New York (1982), the University of Birmingham (1984), and the TU Berlin (1987). He also won many important German literature prizes: the Georg-Büchner-Preis in 1958, the Friedenspreis des Deutschen Buchhandels in 1976, and the Heinrich-Heine-Preis in 1989.

Some of the major themes in his work are the search or loss of one's identity; guilt and innocence (the spiritual crisis of the modern world after Nietzsche proclaimed that "God is dead"); technological omnipotence (the human belief that everything was possible and technology allowed humans to control everything) versus fate (especially in Homo faber); and also Switzerland's idealized self-image as a tolerant democracy based on consensus, critizising it as illusion and portraying people (and especially the Swiss) as being scared by their own liberty and being preoccupied mainly with controlling every part of their life.

Max Frisch has always been a political man, and many of his works make reference to (or, as in Jonas und sein Veteran, are centered around) political issues of the time.

List of works

Novels

  • Tagebuch 1946-1949 (1950)
  • Stiller (1954, I'm Not Stiller)
  • Homo faber (1957)
  • Mein Name sei Gantenbein (1964, A Wilderness of Mirrors)
  • Erinnerungen an Brecht (1968)
  • Tagebuch 1966-1971 (1972)
  • Dienstbüchlein (1974)
  • Montauk (1975)
  • Tryptichon. Drei szenische Bilder (1978)
  • Der Mensch erscheint im Holozän (1979)
  • Blaubart (1982)

Dramatic works

  • Nun singen sie wieder (1945)
  • Die Chinesische Mauer (1947, The Chinese Wall)
  • Als der Krieg zu Ende war (1949, When the War Was Over)
  • Graf Öderland (1951)
  • Biedermann und die Brandstifter (1953), The Firebugs (US)/The Fire Raisers (UK)
  • Don Juan oder Die Liebe zur Geometrie (1953)
  • Andorra (1961)
  • Jonas und sein Veteran (1989)





Last updated: 02-08-2005 15:27:26
Last updated: 05-03-2005 17:50:55