Ilse Ringler-waiter

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Ilse Ringler-Kellner , née Ilse Kellner , (born September 9, 1894 in Sarajevo , † August 25, 1958 in Salzburg ) was an Austrian author .

Life

Ilse Kellner grew up in Bosnia and South Moravia . She passed her high school diploma in Brno in 1911 . In 1912 she passed the state examination in French and then studied for a year at the University of Lausanne . She later lived in Baden , where she wrote poems and stories that appeared in the magazine Wiener Mode and in the Brünner Tagesbote . In 1916 she married the painter and graphic artist Josef Ringler (1887–1970), who illustrated many of her books. In 1920 she moved to Perchtoldsdorf in Lower Austria with her nationally minded husband. In 1937 she was awarded the Moravian Poetry Prize.

The "Nazi poet" Ringler-Kellner wrote stories , poems and dealt with legends and sagas . She had been a member of the NSDAP since January 1, 1937 under number 6130376 and since July 1, 1938, a member of the Reichsschrifttumskammer under number 14356 . She was also a member of the Association of German Writers Austria (BdsÖ), founded in 1936 , which worked intensively on the integration of Austria into the German Reich. As such, she was a contributor to the confessional book of Austrian poets published by the BdSÖ , in which the authors enthusiastically welcomed the Anschluss of Austria .

Her works were influenced by the blood and soil ideology of National Socialism . In 1934 she published poems and ballads under the title Ahnenlandschaft , and on the occasion of the Anschluss in 1938, the consecration verse To the Fuehrer's mother in the confessional book of Austrian poets . Her works Birkhild and South Moravian Homeland were placed on the list of literature to be sorted out in the Soviet occupation zone after the end of the Second World War . It appears on the list of banned authors and books published by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education in 1946 with all of its works.

Fonts (selection)

  • Songs, ballads, legends . Krystall-Verlag, Vienna 1932.
  • Ancestral Landscape: Poems . Krystall-Verlag, Vienna 1935.
  • Birkhild: From the fighting time of an Austrian girl . Enßlin & Laiblin, Reutlingen 1938 (reissued in 1944 with the subtitle “From the time of a struggle of a girl from East Markets”).
  • South Moravian Homeland: Poems . Luser, Leipzig & Vienna 1939.
  • Dear Augustin: (Viennese sagas) . German publishing house for youth and people, Vienna 1942.

literature

  • Robert Teichl: Austrians of the present. Lexicon of creative and creative contemporaries . Österreichische Staatsdruckerei, Vienna 1951, p. 253.
  • Karl Müller: turning points without consequences. The long life of literary anti-modernism in Austria since the 1930s . Otto Müller, Salzburg 1990, p. 324.
  • Sabine Fuchs: “'We tackle every thing together!'. Austrian children's book authors between propaganda and idyll ”. In: Uwe Baur, Karin Gradwohl-Schlacher, Sabine Fuchs (eds.): Makes literature war. Austrian literature under National Socialism (= conclusion. Results from German and comparative literary studies 2). Böhlau, Vienna / Cologne / Weimar 1998, pp. 274–291.
  • Ringler waiter, Ilse . In: Rudolf Vierhaus (Ed.): German Biographical Encyclopedia (DBE) . 2., revised. and extended edition. tape 9 : Schlumberger – Thiersch . De Gruyter / KG Saur, Berlin / Boston / Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-11-096502-5 , p. 429-430 .
  • Ernst Klee : The cultural lexicon for the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, ISBN 978-3-10-039326-5 , p. 487.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. biography .
  2. ^ Ernst Klee : The culture lexicon for the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 487.
  3. ^ Karl Müller: turning points without consequences. The long life of literary anti-modernism in Austria since the 1930s . Otto Müller, Salzburg 1990, p. 324.
  4. ^ Ernst Klee : The culture lexicon for the Third Reich. Who was what before and after 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 487.
  5. ^ German administration for popular education in the Soviet zone of occupation: List of the literature to be sorted out. Zentralverlag, Berlin 1946 ; German administration for popular education in the Soviet zone of occupation, list of literature to be segregated. Second addendum. Deutscher Zentralverlag, Berlin 1948 .
  6. ^ Austrian Federal Ministry for Education (ed.): List of blocked authors and books. Relevant for bookshops and libraries . Ueberreuter, Vienna 1946, p. 48.