Friederike Roth

Friederike Roth ( born April 6, 1948 in Sindelfingen ) is a German writer.

Life and work

Friederike Roth studied after high school philosophy and linguistics at the University of Stuttgart. In 1975, she became a Doctor of Philosophy. From 1976 to 1979 she was a lecturer in anthropology and sociology at the University of Applied Sciences for Social Work in Esslingen am Neckar. Since 1979 she has worked as a radio play dramaturge at South German Broadcasting (now Southwest Broadcasting ) in Stuttgart. Friederike Roth writes poetry, prose, plays and radio plays. Her work, which often deals with themes of love and death is influenced by Roth's scientific study of the language. Since the eighties, the author is the mechanisms of the literary increasingly skeptical. Friederike Roth is a member of the PEN center of Germany.

Fidelio

For the Bonn Fidelio staging ( Premiere: September 2005) Friederike Roth has written new intermediate texts, replacing interim texts of Joseph Ferdinand of Sonnleithner and Georg Friedrich Treitschke, the "classic". The author problematizes in basic content of the opera.

Title

  • Minimal narratives, Stuttgart, 1970 ( together with Gabbo Mateen )
  • Semiotic analysis of aesthetic investigations Georg Simmel, Stuttgart 1975 ( under the name Friederike Schnepp - Roth)
  • Belladonna Bridal, Darmstadt [ et al ] 1978
  • Order dreams, Darmstadt [ et al ] 1979
  • The secure happiness, Leonberg 1979
  • Piano games, Stuttgart 1980
  • Dumb luck, Darmstadt [ et al ] 1980
  • The ride on the Wartburg, Frankfurt am Main 1981
  • The Book of Life, Darmstadt Episode 1 love and Forest, 1983

Publication

  • Eduard Moerike: Wispel, Berlin 1994
  • Year Book of Poetry ( with Christoph Buchwald ), Darmstadt 1988

Translation

  • Dorothy Parker: Close harmony or the dear family, Frankfurt am Main 1989
  • Dorothy Parker: Ladies in Hotel, Zurich 1989
  • Sylvia Plath: Three women, Frankfurt am Main 1991
  • Charles S. Peirce: Graphs and characters, Stuttgart 1971
  • Arnold Wesker: Annie Wobbler, Frankfurt am Main 1984

Awards

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