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Gertrud von Le Fort
Description
Stamp description / Briefmarkenbeschreibung
Deutsch: Serie Bedeutende deutsche Frauen (II), Gertrud von Le Fort (1876-1971)
English: stamp series great german women (II), Gertrud von Le Fort (1876-1971)
Ausgabepreis: 70 Pfennig
First Day of Issue / Erstausgabetag: 15. Januar 1975
Michel-Katalog-Nr: 829
Life
Gertrud von Le Fort (October 11, 1876, Minden - November 1, 1971, Oberstdorf, Bavaria) was a German writer of novels, poems, and essays. She came from a Protestant background, but converted to Catholicism in 1926. Most of Le Fort's writings came after this conversion. In 1952 she won the Gottfried-Keller Prize, an esteemed Swiss literary award.
Her novella Die Letzte am Schafott (English: Last at the Scaffold), published in 1931,[1] was the original inspiration for the opera Dialogues of the Carmelites written by Francis Poulenc, which premiered in 1957. The opera was based on a libretto with this same title written by Georges Bernanos. The book was published in English in 1933 with the title of Song at the Scaffold.[2]
Among her many other works, Le Fort also published a book titled Die ewige Frau (English: The Eternal Woman) in 1934, which was published in paperback in English in 2010. In this work, she countered the modernist analysis on the feminine, not with polemical argument, but with a meditation on womanhood.[3]
References
^ Catholic Family Vignettes [1]
^ The original publisher in English was Sheed & Ward of London
^ Review on Amazon.com [2]
Citation
"Denn die Welt kann zwar durch die Macht des Mannes bewegt werden, gesegnet aber im eigentlichen Sinne des Wortes wird sie immer nur im Zeichen der Frau."
The Eternal Women on the Amazon website "
Literature
Helena M. Tomko : Sacramental Realism: Gertrud von le Fort and German Catholic Literature in the Weimar Republic and Third Reich (1924-46) read online at google-books
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org"
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