Senta Dinglreiter
Senta Dinglreiter (born March 31, 1893 in Fürstenzell , † April 14, 1969 in Munich ) was a Lower Bavarian writer.
Life
Senta Dinglreiter came from a Lower Bavarian farm and despite a lot of resistance, managed to travel the world and write books about it. On the other hand, the novels Brunnöd I and Brunnöd II as well as Da Burgamoasta emerged from their ties to their homeland . In her novels, life on her Heimathof Dinglreit (district of Fürstenzell) comes to life in three generations. Linguistically, it transmits the dialect that was spoken in Fürstenzell at the time.
Many of her texts belong to German colonial literature. In some of them she identified herself as a convinced racist and National Socialist, for example in this quote from 1939: “A silver swastika that the boy wore on his raffia netting flashed. Didn't I have to follow this sign with particular joy, and was it surprising when I cheered into the wonderful tropical morning? "
On the 40th anniversary of her death, her urn was buried in her home parish. Fürstenzell also dedicated the Senta-Dinglreiter-Weg to her.
Works
- German girl on a trip around the world , Leipzig 1932.
- Petzi the Bear , Berlin 1962.
- Da Burgamoasta , Passau 1957.
- Kastorelli Forest Circus , Augsburg 1956.
- I looked at the world , Biberach ad Riss 1954.
- In the Land of the Pharaohs , Berlin 1941.
- Young generation , Berlin 1941
- German woman in Africa , Berlin 1940.
- When will the Germans finally come back? , Leipzig 1940.
- Brunnöd 1 , Passau 1957.
- Brunnöd 2 , Passau 1957.
Web links
- Literature by and about Senta Dinglreiter in the catalog of the German National Library
- Senta Dinglreiter in REGIOWIKI Niederbayern & Altötting
Individual evidence
- ↑ cit. after Timm Ebner: National Socialist Colonial Literature . Wilhelm Fink, Paderborn 2016, p. 172 .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Dinglreiter, Senta |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Lower Bavarian writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | March 31, 1893 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Fürstenzell |
DATE OF DEATH | April 14, 1969 |
Place of death | Munich |