Cora Dietl

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Cora Dietl (born February 17, 1967 in Stuttgart ) is a German literary historian. She has been Professor of German Literary History at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen since 2006 .

Live and act

Cora Dietl passed her Abitur in 1986 at the Georgii-Gymnasium in Esslingen am Neckar and then studied the subjects Older German Language and Literature, Philosophy, and English Literature and Medieval Language at the Universities of Tübingen and Oxford . From 1987 until the end of her studies she was supported by a scholarship from the German National Academic Foundation. She completed her master's degree in Tübingen in 1992. She then completed a second degree at the University of Tübingen in the subjects of art history and historical auxiliary sciences between 1993 and 1995 and was funded in 1994 and 1995 with a doctoral scholarship from the German National Academic Foundation.

She received her PhD in 1995 and then worked for several years at the University of Helsinki . From 1999 to 2001 she was a scholarship holder of the Graduate College Ars & Scientia in the Middle Ages and the Early Modern Age in Tübingen. In 1999 she was appointed Professor of German Literature and Culture at Jyväskylä University in Finland. 2004 habilitation they are at Tuebingen University with a thesis on the plays Jacob Locher and received the venia legendi for German philology. She then represented professorships and lectureships at the Westphalian Wilhelms University in Münster and at the University of Konstanz , was involved in a research project at the University of Utrecht from 2004 to 2006 and in 2006 became Professor of German Literary History at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen.

In 2019 Dietl became a corresponding member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences .

Fonts

  • Minnerede, Roman and 'historia'. The 'Wilhelm of Austria' Johann von Würzburg. Tübingen 1999 (= Hermaea , 87).
  • Minimal grammar Middle Low German. Göppingen 2002 (= Göppinger works on German studies , 699).
  • The dramas of Jacob Locher and the early humanist stage in southern Germany. Berlin et al. 2005 (= sources and research on literary and cultural history , 37).

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