Heinz Reinhold

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Heinz Reinhold (born September 27, 1910 in Eythra , Saxony , † November 15, 2012 in Berlin ) was a German English graduate and university professor .

Life

Origin and education

The Evangelical baptized native axis Heinz Reinhold, son of the engineer Arno Reinhold and his wife Toska, born Scheffler studied after high school English, among others, Levin Ludwig Schücking , French , history and philosophy at the University of Leipzig and at the Christian Albrecht University of Kiel . In 1937 in Leipzig his promotion to Dr. phil.

academic career

After completing his studies, Heinz Reinhold received a position as a research assistant at the Institute for English Studies at the University of Leipzig. When the war began , he was drafted into the German armed forces and later became a Soviet prisoner of war . After returning , he completed his habilitation in 1954 as a private lecturer in English at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich . In 1955, Heinz Reinhold switched to the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg as an associate professor . In 1956 Reinhold accepted the call to full professorship in English studies at the Free University of Berlin , and in 1975 he retired . Heinz Reinhold made a particular contribution to the history of English literature.

Family and death

In 1956 he married Erika nee Anspach. From this marriage came the two children Gisela and Rüdiger.

Heinz Reinhold died in Berlin in 2012 at the old age of 102. His grave is in the Dahlem forest cemetery .

Publications

  • author
  • Puritanism and aristocracy, dissertation , Junker and Dünnhaupt, Berlin, 1938.
  • Humorous tendencies in English poetry in the Middle Ages , M. Niemeyer, Tübingen, 1953.
  • The English novel of the 19th century, A. Bagel, Düsseldorf, 1976.
  • The English novel in the 18th century: sociological, intellectual and genre-historical aspects, Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, Berlin, Cologne, Mainz, 1978.
  • The English drama 1580-1642: Aspects of contemporary topicality, Kohlhammer, Stuttgart, 1982.
  • Charles Dickens and the Age of Naturalism and Aesthetic Movement: An Examination of the History of Taste, C. Winter, Heidelberg, 1990.
  • A childhood in Germany between 1910 and 1925, Kovac, Hamburg, 2000.
  • In turbulent times. My apprenticeship and traveling years 1926-1939, Hamburg 2003, 452 pages, ISBN 3-8300-1212-8
  • Lost Years? My life in war and in captivity 1939-1950, Hamburg 2002, 308 pages, ISBN 3-8300-0709-4
  • A late returnee is looking for his way. From assistant in Munich to professor in Berlin 1950-1956, Hamburg 2005, 166 pages, ISBN 3-8300- 1744-8
  • editor
  • Charles Dickens; his work in the light of new German research, C. Winter, Heidelberg, 1969.

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Hans-Jürgen Mende: Lexicon of Berlin burial places . Pharus-Plan, Berlin 2018, ISBN 978-3-86514-206-1 , p. 586.