Maja Haderlap

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Maja Haderlap (born 8 March 1961 in

National Socialism in Austria.[1]

Life

Her grandmother who was sent to Ravensbrück concentration camp. At ten years old, Haderlap's father was tortured by the Nazis to disclose where his father, who joined Slovene Partisans, was hiding.[1] Her father often wanted to kill himself because of the way Austrian majority treated him. The family waited until he passed out, then pried his fingers from the gun. After reading her grandmother’s diary, she was “afraid of being overrun by the past, of being crushed by its weight.” She made a conscious decision to write about her family’s history in a novel.[2]

Work

She holds a PhD in Theatre Studies from

Alpen-Adria-Universität in Klagenfurt. She was editor for many years of the Carinthian Slovene minority literary magazine 'Mladje' and wrote poetry, prose, and essays in both Slovenian and German. Her work has been published in numerous German and international literary journals and anthologies. From 1992 to 2007, she worked as drama supervisor at the Klagenfurt City Theatre. She is the most awarded member of the Graz
's Guild of writers and lives in Klagenfurt.

Angel of Oblivion

Winning one of the most important awards for literature in the German language, the

Zurich in 2018,[citation needed] her most notable novel was made into a drama and put on theater stages. The story is told from a point of view of a young girl, growing up in the late-1960s or early-1970s in the Austrian province of Carinthia, learning to navigate the terrain between Slovenian, a language of the past anti-Nazi resistance and present humiliation, and German, an escape from being treated as traitor by her German-speaking Austrian neighbors.[3]

Books

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b Angel pozabe je postal moja pripoved (in Slovene; Angel of Forgetting has become my narrative), Delo's Pogledi Magazin, 2011, Ljubljana
  2. ^ Keeper of Stories: On Maja Haderlap’s ‘Angel of Oblivion’, The Millions Literary Magazine, November 10, 2016
  3. ^ Dve leti sem govorila o Koroški Slovencih, zdaj se moram vrniti k sebi, Delo, March 7th 2014
  4. ^ Cf. owf.at: writer in residence Archived 2015-07-22 at the Wayback Machine

External links