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Helga Stipa Madland

    Helga Stipa Madland transitions from her academic career in German Literature to crafting compelling fiction and non-fiction. Her writing delves into the intricacies of the human psyche and the complexities of relationships, exploring universal themes of life, love, and loss. Madland's prose is often characterized by its intimate and introspective quality, inviting readers to reflect on their own experiences. She offers a unique perspective shaped by a deep understanding of literary traditions and a keen observation of the human condition.

    Non-Aristotelian drama in eighteenth century Germany and its modernity: J. M. R. Lenz
    Image and text: J. M. R. Lenz
    Marianne Ehrmann
    • 1998

      The Swiss-born writer Marianne Ehrmann, who lived and worked in Vienna, Strasbourg, and Stuttgart, initially pursued an acting career. Later, as a fiction writer, Ehrmann made educating women her primary goal. In this biography, Professor Madland follows this fascinating woman's life story, emphasizing her unique situation as editor of two women's journals. Ehrmann's opinionated wit and experience in the public sphere as an eighteenth-century working woman gave her a distinctive voice to enliven contemporary gender debates. She argues that reason and emotion should not exist in separate spheres, and that men and women should share both so that they may become better persons.

      Marianne Ehrmann
    • 1982

      The changing concept of mimesis from Bodmer and Breitinger to Lenz had a profound effect upon dramatic language, character and structure. Their notion of mimesis, which rejects Aristotle and the imitation of existing models, provided the impetus for innovation on the German stage. The dramatic theory and practice of J. M. R. Lenz is not an abrupt caesura breaking with the conventions of Enlightenment drama, but the culmination of a Non-Aristotelian tradition beginning with Bodmer and Breitinger. Lenz's dramatic theory and practice, which has found a resounding echo in twentieth-century dramaturgy, is examined in light of his Non-Aristotelian predecessors.

      Non-Aristotelian drama in eighteenth century Germany and its modernity: J. M. R. Lenz