Christine Brückner


Christine Brückner was a German writer.

Life

Christine Brückner was born in Schmillinghausen near Arolsen in the Free State of Waldeck-Pyrmont, the daughter of the pastor Carl Emde and his wife Clotilde. She lived there until 1934 when she moved to Kassel.
She attended high school in Arolsen and Kassel, completing her Abitur in 1941.
During the war years, she was drafted for service in the General Command in Kassel, and then as a bookkeeper in an aircraft factory in Halle.
After the war, she received a diploma as librarian in Stuttgart.
She studied economics, literature, art history and psychology in Marburg, where for two semesters she was director of the Mensa Academica. During that time, she wrote articles for the magazine Frauenwelt in Nuremberg. From 1948 to 1958, she was married to the industrial designer Werner Brückner. In 1960 she returned to Kassel, where, from 1967, she lived with her second husband and fellow writer Otto Heinrich Kühner, with whom she collaborated on several works.
From 1980 to 1984, she was Vice-President of the German PEN Center.
She is an honorary citizen of the city of Kassel.
She died in 1996, ten weeks after her husband. The couple is buried in Schmillinghausen.
In 1984, they established the Brückner-Kühner Foundation, which since 1985 has awarded the Kassel Literary Prize for "grotesque and comic work" at a high artistic level.
The Foundation, now located in the house in which Christine Brückner and her husband lived, functions today as a center for comic literature and as a small museum that can be visited by appointment.

Major works

Christine Brückner is one of the most successful women writers of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Many of her books sold in the millions, which has led to the judgement of her writing as "popular literature" in the negative sense. But this is undeserved; she writes about fundamental human problems, especially from a woman's point of view, in an entertaining fashion, and reflecting the author's Protestant worldview.
Brückner's first novel, Before the Traces Disappear was a great success, allowing her to make a living as a freelance writer.
The manuscript won a competition run by the publisher Bertelsmann. In its first year it sold 376 thousand copies, and has since been translated into several languages.
It tells of the life crisis of a man who is involved in the accidental death of a young woman.
She then published a number of other novels, which focus mainly on issues of love, marriage and relationships from a woman's perspective, and on the possibilities for female self-realization.
In 1975 appeared Manure and Stock, followed by its sequels, Nowhere is Poenichen and The Quints, which formed the so-called Poenichen trilogy.
At nearly 1000 pages, it tells the life story of Maximiliane Quint, born in 1918, the granddaughter of an aristocratic landowner in Pomerania.
The success, especially of the first two volumes, was due to the work's engaging narrative of the history and achievements of the generation of women who had to prove themselves under the conditions of war, displacement and reconstruction.
In 1977 and 1978 Manure and Stock and Nowhere is Poenichen were filmed as a mini-series for television.
The main actors were Ulrike Bliefert, Arno Assmann and Edda Seippel.
These contributed significantly to the popularity of the series.
The monologues Desdemona - if you had only spoken. Eleven uncensored speeches of eleven incensed women achieved not only wide circulation and translations into many languages, but also established her as a playwright, as they are among the most performed plays at the time.
In tones from serious to cheerful, the work deals with historical and fictional female figures of Western cultural history, from Clytemnestra to Christiane von Goethe to Gudrun Ensslin.
In addition to novels and stories, Brückner also published autobiographical works, plays and children's books.
Ullstein has published a 20-volume collection of the author's works.

Awards and honors

Works in English