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Introduction
Benjamin, Walter
Bismarck, Otto v.
Brecht, Bertolt
Celan, Paul
Döblin, Alfred
Fontane, Theodor
Grosz, George
Grünbein, Durs
Heartfield, John
Honigmann, Barbara
Isherwood, Christopher
Johnson, Uwe
Kleist, Heinrich v.
Kollwitz, Käthe
Kracauer, Siegfried
Lang, Fritz
Lasker-Schüler, Else
Liebermann, Max
Liebknecht, Karl
Luxemburg, Rosa
Marc, Franz
Ossietzky, Carl v.
Riefenstahl, Leni
Ruttmann, Walther
Schinkel, Karl Friedrich
Speer, Albert
Tieck, Ludwig
Tucholsky, Kurt
Ury, Lesser
Varnhagen, Rahel
Wenders, Wim
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Fontane, Theodor
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b. Dec. 30, 1819, Neuruppin, Brandenburg
d. Sept. 20, 1898, Berlin
writer who is considered the first master of modern Realistic fiction in Germany.
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He began his literary career in 1848 as a journalist, serving for several years in England
as correspondent for two Prussian newspapers. From this position he wrote several
books on English life, including Ein Sommer in London (1854; "A Summer in
London") and Jenseits des Tweed (1860; Across the Tweed: A Tour of Mid-Victorian
Scotland). From 1860 to 1870 he wrote for the conservative newspaper Kreuzzeitung,
and between 1862 and 1882 he published a four-volume account of his travels in the
March of Brandenburg. He combined historical and anecdotal material with
descriptions of the Prussian landscape and the seats of historic families. He also wrote
popular ballads, Männer und Helden (1850; "Men and Heroes") and Balladen (1861;
"Ballads"), stirring celebrations of heroic and dramatic events, some drawn from
Prussian history.
Fontane produced his best work after he became the drama critic for the liberal
newspaper Vossische Zeitung and was freed from the earlier conservative restraint.
Turning to the novel late in life, he wrote, at the age of 56, Vor dem Sturm (1878;
Before the Storm), considered to be a masterpiece in the genre of the historical novel.
He portrayed the Prussian nobility both critically and sympathetically. His aim was, as
he said, "the undistorted reflection of the life we lead." In several of his novels Fontane
also dealt with the problem of women's role in domestic life; L'Adultera (1882; The
Woman Taken in Adultery), Irrungen, Wirrungen (1888; "Trials and Tribulations";
Eng. trans. Entanglements), Frau Jenny Treibel (1893), and Effi Briest (1895) are
among his best. Effi Briest, in particular, is known for its superb characterization and
the skillful portrayal of the milieu of Fontane's native Brandenburg. His other major
works are Der Stechlin (1899), which is noted for its charming style, and Schach von
Wuthenow (1883; A Man of Honor), in which he portrays the weaknesses of the
Prussian upper class.
Source
"Fontane, Theodor" Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
<http://www.eb.com:180/bol/topic?eu=35415&sctn=1>
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