Kurt Kreiler – Wikipedia

before-content-x4

Kurt Kreiler (Born June 23, 1950 in Munich) is a German author and dramaturge.

after-content-x4

Kurt Kreiler studied German studies and philosophy and did his doctorate on the topic “The Writers Republic. On the relationship between literature and politics in the Munich Räter Republic ”. After an extensive journalistic activity, he worked in Wagenbach-Verlag and other publishing houses as well as as a dramaturge at the Landesbühne Niedersachsen Nord in Wilhelmshaven.

Kreiler has worked as a freelance radio author since 1983, wrote over 100 features and radio plays for the public broadcasters in Germany and Austria.

In 2003 he founded MoCean Otonverlag together with Robert Galitz. In 2009 he received the German Audiobook Prize in the “Best publishing performance” category for the “Two thousands’ documents” Till Tolkemitt. [first]

He (together with Robert Galitz) followed the “sound and film documents of Thomas and Family” to follow the original sound editions of Gottfried Benn, Elias Canetti, Hubert Fichte, Elsa Sophia von Kamphoevener and Kurt Schwitters: The magician’s circle , 2018.

Together with Chris Hirte, Kreiler translated the “first English novella”, which appeared anonymously in 1573 The Adventures of Master F.I. And identified as part of a philological-historical evidence as an early work by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl von Oxford (1550–1604).

In 2009 he published under the title The man who invented Shakespeare The first German biography of the English dramatist Edward de Vere, 17th Earl von Oxford, in which he represents the thesis that Oxford alias Shake-Spear wrote the Shakespeareschen works. (The book served not As a template for Roland Emmerich’s film Anonymous .)

Under the title The delicate thread that the beauty spins (2013) appeared by Kreiler’s poetic translation by Oxford’s lyrical overall work.

after-content-x4

The English -language website of the literary detective is the only Oxfordian website to put together all texts by the Elisabethan contemporaries who refer to Edward de Vere as the author of the Shakespeareschen works.

  • (Ed.): Fanal: Erich Mühsam 1905-1932. Wagenbach, Berlin 1977 (essay).
  • The writer’s republic – to the relationship between literature and politics in the Munich Räter Republic. A systematic chapter of political literary history. Guhl, Berlin 1978.
  • (Ed.): Traditions of German Justice – Political Processes 1914–1932. Berlin 1978.
  • (Ed.): Interior world-understanding of understanding. Frankfurt 1979.
  • (Ed., With Claudia Reinhardt and Peter Sloterdijk): In Irr society – understanding of understanding about psychotherapy and psychiatry. Suhrkamp, ​​Frankfurt/M. 1980. ISBN 3-518-10435-7
  • (Ed.): Otto Gross: From gender need to social disaster. Robinson, Frankfurt/M. 1980. ISBN 3-88592-005-0
  • (Ed.): They slowly make us dead – certificates of political prisoners in Germany 1780–1980. Aunterhand, Darmstadt 1984. ISBN 3-472-61374-2
  • The three life of Denis Pécic. Feature. Deutschlandfunk. June 4, 2004
  • (Ed. U. Trans.): The Poems of Edward from Vere / Edward de Veres Gedichte. Laugwitz, Buchholz in the Nordheide 2005. ISBN 3-933077-17-6
  • (Ed. With Ingeborg Hecht): Hotel Excelsior – diary of a search for traces 1945/46 / Stella Silberstein (Simha Naor). Dölling and Galitz, Hamburg 2005. ISBN 3-937904-30-1
  • (Ed. U. Trans.): Edward de Vere: Fortunatus in misfortune. The Aventians of the Master F.I. Island-publisher, Frankfurt / m. 2006. ISBN 3-458-17316-1
  • The man, the Shakespeare Deferage – Edward the Vere, Earl of Oxford (1550-1604). Island-publisher, Frankfurt / m. 2009. Isbn 3-458-17452-4
  • (Transl.): William Shakespeare – the songs and poems from the pieces. Insel-Verlag, Berlin 2011. ISBN 3-458-17506-7
  • Anonymous Shake-Speare – The Man Behind. Dölling and Galitz, Munich 2011. ISBN 3-86218-021-2
  • The delicate thread that the beauty spins. Hundred poems by Edward de Vere, Earl of Oxford. With a foreword ‘Shakespeare as a young man’. Island-publisher, Frankfurt / m. 2013. ISBN 978-3-458-17587-2
  1. German Audiobook Prize 2009 in the “Best publishing performance” category. In: Deutscher-hermuchprreis.de. Accessed on August 25, 2022 .

after-content-x4