Gerhard Goebel (Romanist)

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Gerhard Goebel (originally Gerhard Bickerich ; born July 20, 1932 in Berlin ; † November 9, 2009 ) was a German Romance studies and literary scholar.

life and work

Goebel, who was originally called Gerhard Bickerich, first studied Protestant theology in Berlin, then English and Romance studies. His most important teachers were Hans Junecke, Erich Loos , Horst Baader and above all Walter Pabst . From 1962 he was a lecturer in Dijon for three years. He received his doctorate in 1965 with Zur Erzähltechnik in the 'Histoires comiques' of the 17th century (Sorel-Furetière) and completed his habilitation in 1970 with Walter Pabst with Poeta faber. Fictional Architecture in Italian, Spanish and French Renaissance and Baroque Literature (Heidelberg 1971). In 1971 he became a professor at the Free University of Berlin . In 1975 he moved to a chair for French literature at the University of Hanover . From 1981 to 2000 he taught French and Italian literature at the University of Frankfurt .

Other works

  • (Translation from French) Pierre Klossowski, Der Baphomet. Roman , Reinbek 1968, 1987
  • (Under the name of Gerhard Goebel-Schilling) La littérature entre l'engagement et le jeu: pour une histoire de la notion de littérature , Marburg 1988
  • (Under the name Gerhard Goebel-Schilling) (together with Salvatore A. Sanna and Ulrich Schulz-Buschhaus ) Resist. Notes on Calvino's narrative work , Frankfurt 1990
  • Stéphane Mallarmé, poems: French and German , translated and commented with the collaboration of Frauke Bünde and Bettina Rommel, Schneider, Gerlingen 1993, ISBN 3-7953-0906-9 .
  • (Ed.) (Together with Bettina Rommel) Stéphane Mallarmé, Critical Writings, French and German . Translated by Gerhard Goebel with the assistance of Christine Le Gal. With an introduction and explanations by Bettina Rommel, Gerlingen 1998.

literature

  • Les mots de la tribu. For Gerhard Goebel , ed. by Thomas Amos, Helmut Bertram and Maria Cristina Giaimo, Tübingen 2000 (with list of publications)
  • Obituary by Thomas Amos in: romanistik.de

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