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Grete Weiskopf

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Grete Weiskopf (11 May 1905 – 15 March 1966), known by the pseudonym Alex Wedding, was a German writer of children's and young adult fiction.

Life

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Born Grete Bernheim in Salzburg, she initially worked as a typist, bookseller, and bank clerk in Berlin. In 1928 she married the Czech-born author Franz Carl Weiskopf, a member of the German Communist Party and the Association of Proletarian-Revolutionary Authors. In 1931 she authored her first young adult novel, Ede und Unku, which was among the books destroyed during the Nazi book burnings. In 1933 she and her husband fled to Prague; in 1939 they fled via Paris to New York City.[1]

After the Second World War the couple returned to Prague for a brief period. That same year, Franz began working in the diplomatic service, which led to assignments in Washington, DC and Stockholm. From 1950 to 1952 they lived in the People's Republic of China, where she worked as a translator and journalist. From 1953 until her death she lived in East Germany. She and her husband are buried in Zentralfriedhof Friedrichsfelde.

Career

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During her life in East Germany, Weiskopf wrote children's and young adult novels and short stories. Her two most successful books are Ede und Unku and The Arctic Ocean, which were both adapted into films. She was considered a pioneer of socialist children's literature.[2]

Honors

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Works

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  • 1931: Ede und Unku
  • 1936: Das Eismeer ruft
  • 1948: Die Fahne des Pfeiferhänsleins
  • 1948: Söldner ohne Sold, Ein Roman für die Jugend
  • 1952: Das eiserne Büffelchen
  • 1961: Die Drachenbraut. Chinesische Volksmärchen
  • 1963: Hubert, das Flusspferd. (based on the true story of Huberta)
  • 1965: Im Schatten des Baobab. Märchen und Fabeln aus Afrika

Filmography

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Adaptations

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Scripts

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  • 1957: Lissy
  • 1964: Ferientage

Further reading

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  • Astrid Fernengel: Kinderliteratur im Exil, Tectum, Marburg, 2008, Diss. TU Berlin 2006
  • Manfred Orlick: Reminiszenz an Alex Wedding (zum 50. Todestag). In: Ossietzky, Volume 6, 2016, S. 208–210, online bei sopos.org.
  • Werner Röder; Herbert A. Strauss: International Biographical Dictionary of Central European Émigrés 1933-1945. Vol.2, Munich: Saur, 1983 ISBN 3-598-10089-2, S. 1212

References

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  1. ^ Scheibe, Hermine (1976). Alex Weddings künstlerischer und literaturtheoretischer Beitrag zur Entwicklung der sozialistischen deutschen Kinderliteratur. DDR-Zentrum für Kinderliteratur.
  2. ^ Blumesberger, Susanne (2007). Alex Wedding (1905–1966) und die proletarische Kinder- und Jugendliteratur. Praesens Verlag. ISBN 3-7069-0363-6.
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