Maria Zierer-Steinmüller

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Maria Zierer-Steinmüller (born December 6, 1895 in Munich ; † November 26, 1979 there ) was a German writer .

Career

Zierer was born as the daughter of a shoemaker and a farmer's daughter in Munich's Luisenstrasse . After attending primary school, she trained as a seamstress. In 1928 she began her writing activity. Her books, mostly written in dialect language, often tell stories from the petty-bourgeois milieu of country people and farmers. Some of her early novels and stories experienced various new editions and revisions until the 1960s. The character of Monika Wieshuber from Monika Moves to the City (1938) was continued in Die Wieshuberin and their suitors (1951).

Honors

As early as 1951/52, Maria Zierer-Steinmüller was named several times as a candidate for the Wilhelm Raabe Prize by her publishers in association with similar authors such as Georg Schwarz , Ludwig Bäte or Hanna Stephan , but she came as the author of a "conservative-idealistic and popular native seal tradition ”is not on the shortlist.

In 1977 she received the Federal Cross of Merit on ribbon. She was awarded the Silver Poet Ship by the literary society “Die Barke” .

plant

Novels and short stories

  • The peasant women from Waldeckhof , Turkan-Verlag, Munich 1935
  • Servant Medardus becomes master , Cotta, Stuttgart 1935
  • Things in the home . With drawings by Ernst Dombrowski, Matthias-Grünewald-Verlag, Wiesbaden 1936
  • Foreign city . Roman from Munich, Cotta, Stuttgart 1937
  • Monika moves to town . Roman from Munich, Franz Eher Verlag, Berlin 1938
  • Master Firnholzer . Cotta, Stuttgart 1938
  • The swinging bridge . Cotta, Stuttgart 1939
  • Pawn step. Stories. Cotta, Stuttgart 1940
  • Bavarian stories . Stories, field edition , Cotta, Stuttgart 1944
  • Young daughter . Cotta, Stuttgart 1944
  • Die Schlichten , Strutz, Säckingen am Rhein 1946
  • The ruby ​​colored heart . Stories, Habbel, Regensburg 1950
  • The daughter Hanna . Berg, Munich 1951
  • The Wieshuberin and her suitors . Berg, Munich 1951
  • The lard noodles and other cheerful stories . Berg, Munich 1955
  • I am Ziska Mertens . Berg, Munich 1958
  • Romance in Ruhpolding . Berg, Munich 1959
  • The new one at the Wiesnerhof . Meister, Rosenheim 1967
  • The farm without sons . Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1969
  • Moorkolben , Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1970
  • The last farmer's wife , Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1971
  • The unfortunate woman at the Wiesnerhof . Zauberkreis-Verlag, Rastatt 1972
  • Margarete Erlanger . Ilmgau-Verlag, Pfaffenhofen (ad Ilm) 1973, ISBN 3-7787-3036-3
  • The young farmer from the Hanghof . Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1976, ISBN 3-475-52176-8
  • City people and country people. Hearty and curious . Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1980, ISBN 3-475-52295-0
  • The Buchenmühlhof . Rosenheimer Verlagshaus, Rosenheim 1981, ISBN 3-475-52333-7

drama

  • The decision: a serious scene about the fateful encounter between two people , Deutscher Theaterverlag, Weinheim (Bergstrasse) 1971.

literature

  • Hellmuth Langenbucher : Folk-like poetry of the time , 5th edition, Junker and Dünnhaupt, 1940, p. 324f.
  • Maria Zierer-Steinmüller (December 1, 1895– November 26, 1979). An unforgettable Munich author. In: Alfons Schweiggert , Hannes S. Macher: Authors in Bavaria. 20th century . Bayerland publishing house, Dachau 2004, ISBN 3-89251-340-6 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://trivialitas.tr.ohost.de/leih/leihz/zierer-wies.htm  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / trivialitas.tr.ohost.de  
  2. Hanna Leitgeb: The excellent author: municipal literary prizes and cultural policy in Germany, 1926-1971 , Walter de Gruyter 1994, p. 354
  3. ^ Sebastian Graeb-Könneker: Autochthonous Modernity . Westdeutscher Verlag 1996, ISBN 978-3531128917 , pp. 103, 106 u. 138.