Friedrich Düsel
Friedrich Düsel (born February 11, 1869 in Strelitz , † December 8, 1945 in Berlin ) was a German writer , literary historian and editor .
Life
His father was a master baker in Strelitz. He studied in Munich, Jena, Berlin and Rostock German and graduated with doctorate from. He worked as an editor for the Deutsche Zeitung , then for 36 years as the publisher and editor-in-chief of Westermanns Monatshefte in Braunschweig. He published many editions of works and selected editions by German poets, among others by Theodor Storm , Emanuel Geibel , Nikolaus Lenau , Fritz Reuter and Ludwig Uhland .
Work (selection)
- The dramatic monologue in the poetics of the 17th and 18th centuries and in Lessing's dramas. Voss, Hamburg / Leipzig 1897. (Reprint 1977) ( digitized version )
- Germanizations. Dictionary for everyday life. Westermann, Braunschweig 1915.
- Daniel Sanders . Words of remembrance and appreciation on his 100th birthday. In: Westermanns Monatshefte, Vol. 62 (1918/19), pp. 298-303
- Maxim Gorki and Anton Chekhov. An introduction to their stage works . Schneider, Berlin 1922.
- Leo N. Tolstoy and his stage works. Schneider, Berlin 1922.
Editing (selection)
- Festschrift for Daniel Sanders' seventieth birthday. With contributions from well-known writers and scholars. Lupelow, Strelitz 1889.
- Theodor Storm. Commemorative book for Storm's hundredth birthday, September 14, 1917. Westermann, Braunschweig 1916. ( digitized version )
- German folk tales. Selected by Friedrich Düsel. Westermann, Braunschweig 1918.
- Theodor Storm: From the sea and the heath. The ten most beautiful novels. Knaur, Berlin 1928.
- ETA Hoffmann : Romantic fairy tales. Westermann, Braunschweig 1911.
Web links
- Matriculation of the University of Rostock
- Brief information on Friedrich Düsel as Christian Morgenstern's correspondent
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Düsel, Friedrich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 11, 1869 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Strelitz |
DATE OF DEATH | December 8, 1945 |
Place of death | Berlin |