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1 Life  





2 Work  





3 Publisher  





4 References  





5 External links  














Eva Weissweiler






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Eva-Ruth Weissweiler
Eva Weissweiler in 2002
Born (1951-02-14) 14 February 1951 (age 73)
NationalityGerman
Occupation(s)Writer and musicologist

Eva-Ruth Weissweiler (born 14 February 1951 in Mönchengladbach) is a German writer, musicologist and non fiction writer.

Life[edit]

Weissweiler entered the Mönchengladbach State Girls' Grammar School in 1961, where she graduated in 1969 (Abitur). She comes from a music-loving merchant family and has two older brothers.

In addition to school lessons, she attended the Rheinische Musikschule [de] in Cologne and the Robert Schumann Hochschule in Düsseldorf. She was twice State winner in the Jugend musiziert competition on the concert of alto recorder and at the age of 14 she made concert tours with this instrument as a soloist, among others to England. After short piano studies at the Cologne University of Music and Dance, she enrolled in the winter semester 1969/70 to study musicology, German and Islamic studies at the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, where she received her doctorate in 1976. [1] Her dissertation was published under her married name at the time, Eva Perkuhn, which she took again shortly before the birth of her first child, to take up her maiden name, Weissweiler, again. After her studies she worked as a radio editor and freelance writer.

Weissweiler is the author of biographies, novels, short stories, radio features and documentaries. She has written articles for almost all German-language stations and texts for the Frankfurter Allgemeine, the Süddeutsche, Emma and the Kölner Stadtanzeiger. She edited the correspondence between Clara and Robert Schumann and Fanny and Felix Mendelssohn. Another main focus is the reappraisal of the period of National Socialism in musicology, to which she dedicated several documentaries for the NDR and WDR. Furthermore the literature of migrants in Germany. Together with her husband she filmed 10 portraits of authors on this topic under the motto Nationality Writers on behalf of the former Ministry of Culture, Urban Development and Sport NRW.

She received a working scholarship from the state North Rhine-Westphalia in 1994 and a scholarship from the Kunststiftung NRW in 1995.

Weissweiler is a member of the PEN Centre Germany and - after an interruption of several years - since the end of 2007 of the Verband deutscher Schriftstellerinnen und Schriftsteller in the Vereinte Dienstleistungsgewerkschaft, whose attitude towards right-wing extremism in her own ranks she has repeatedly and vehemently criticized. In May 2009 she founded the association AURA 09[2] (Action of independent Rhine-Ruhr authors) in Cologne together with a circle of 15 authors to promote and stimulate the literary discussion culture in the region. The association was active in the border area between literature and social work and soon made a name for itself in Cologne. Among other things, it was the first literary group in Cologne to recall the works of those colleagues whose estates were destroyed when the Historical Archive of the City of Cologne collapsed. As spokesperson for this association, she and her husband were for years the director and initiator of writing and photography courses for mentally ill people, the results of which were presented in many exhibitions. After seven years of dedicated work, the association was dissolved in autumn 2016

Work[edit]

Publisher[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ In: Eva Ruth Perkuhn: The theories of Arabic influence on European music of the Middle Ages. Diss., Verlag für Orientkunde, Walldorf-Hessen 1976, Appendix
  • ^ Siehe Weblink NRW Literatur im Netz
  • ^ Die Sachbuch-Bestenliste für Februar 2020
  • External links[edit]

  • History
  • Classical music
  • flag Germany

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eva_Weissweiler&oldid=1027820871"

    Categories: 
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    1951 births
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