Caroline Mardaus

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Caroline Mardaus , also known as Caroline Rusch , (born March 12, 1958 in Augsburg ; born Hollenburger) is a German writer , teacher and freelance journalist . In a variety of publications, she deals with psychological aspects of life, lifestyle and artistic topics.

Life

Caroline Mardaus was born as "Caroline Hollenburger" and spent a large part of her youth in Mering . After attending school, she completed an apprenticeship at the State College for Ceramics in Landshut from 1976 to 1979 and then opened her own workshop. After that, from 1985 she decided to catch up on the university entrance qualification in the second educational path at the Bayernkolleg Augsburg . After graduating from high school in 1988, Rusch began to study classical philology , especially Latin , and English . She has been a freelance writer since 1996. She was married to Manfred Rusch for the first time. In 2000, Caroline Hollenburger-Rusch wrote the work “Liquitur in lacrimas. On the use of the teardrop motif in Ovid's Metamorphoses ”to obtain the philological doctorate. She received her doctorate in 2001 “magna cum laude”. As a result, she began teaching Latin at the Rudolf-Diesel-Gymnasium Augsburg . As a freelance journalist, Caroline Mardaus contributed to the press , including for the FAZ and the women's magazine emotion . In short she was called "Caroline Rusch", now her stage name .

In 1994 she met the photographer Frank Mardaus . The artistic collaboration with him began, which was to lead to their second marriage in 2003. Mardaus has placed his focus on narrative photography in the field of fine arts .

Caroline Mardaus was one of the finalists at the Bavarian-Swabian Literature Prize in 2003 and 2004. In 2009 she was a guest on Frank Plasberg's talk show “Plasberg in person” at WDR , when the topic “Unequal couples - where love falls” was discussed. The artist couple enriches Augsburg's cultural life with exhibitions like “WE-0007”. In 2011 the writer presented the book “Paarlandschaften” in a reading in her familiar Mering. It is part of the "so-called Bagaluten - Trilogy " of the author, to which the band is one of "The Octopus Garden".

Works

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. "Friedberger Allgemeine" from August 21, 2009: Childhood that came to an end in Paar and St. Jona , queried on January 17, 2010
  2. "Augsburger Allgemeine" from January 12, 2010: Under the blue moon
  3. Monthly magazine "Augsburg Journal", March 2009: When he is younger ...
  4. Finalists at the Bavarian-Swabian Literature Competition, requested on January 16, 2010
  5. ^ WDR broadcast: Plasberg in person from February 6, 2009
  6. "Die Augsburger Zeitung" of September 30, 2009 , accessed on January 16, 2010
  7. Friedberger Allgemeine from October 23, 2011: This homeland literature is not musty, but rather uncomfortable , queried on December 23, 2011