Marie Brugger

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Marie Brugger around 1900

Marie Brugger , also Maria Brugger (born March 23, 1860 in St. Wendel , † after 1913) was a German writer .

Life

Brugger became interested in art from an early age and showed a talent for music and poetry. She married the government architect Brugger and moved with him to Munich . Only years after her marriage did she publish her first poems and songs. Some of their texts have been set to music. In 1901 she and her husband moved to Beuthen in Upper Silesia, where he accepted a position as town planning officer. Brugger also wrote singing and joke games and humoresques.

Her four-act play Die Friedenseiche was described by contemporary critics as “amusing ... in its dilettantism”: “It wants to reduce anarchism to absurdity in confused, completely impossible scenes. Or also social democracy. Or some other anti-philistine doctrine. It won't be clear. "

Works

  • Saint Ursula. Poetry. Kölner Verlags-Anstalt, Cologne 1895.
  • Songs of a little woman. Seitz & Schauer, Munich 1898.
  • The Peace Oak. Play in 4 acts. Pierson, Dresden / Leipzig 1900.

literature

  • Marie Brugger . In: Franz Brümmer : Lexicon of German poets and prose writers from the beginning of the 19th century to the present . Volume 1. Brockhaus, Leipzig 1913, p. 360.
  • Maria Brugger . In: Germany, Austria-Hungary and Switzerland Scholars, artists and writers in words and pictures . Second edition. Bio-bibliographical publishing house Albert Steinhage, Hannover 1910, p. 103.
  • Brugger, Maria . In: Elisabeth Friedrichs: The German-speaking women writers of the 18th and 19th centuries. A lexicon . Metzler, Stuttgart 1981, ISBN 3-476-00456-2 , ( Repertories on the history of German literature 9), p. 42.
  • Brugger, Marie . In: Sophie Pataky (Hrsg.): Lexicon of German women of the pen . Volume 1. Verlag Carl Pataky, Berlin 1898, p. 109 ( digitized version ).

Individual evidence

  1. Michael Georg Conrad, Arthur Seidl (ed.): The society . Volume 17, Part 1, 1901, p. 48.