Bastian Sick Explained

Bastian Sick
Birth Date:17 July 1965
Birth Place:Lübeck, Schleswig-Holstein
Occupation:columnist, author
Nationality: Germany
Alma Mater:University of Hamburg
Notableworks:Der Dativ ist dem Genitiv sein Tod
Website:http://www.bastiansick.de/

Bastian Sick (pronounced as /de/; born 17 July 1965) is a German journalist and author.

Biography

Bastian Sick grew up in Ratekau, in the north of Germany near Lübeck, and attended the Leibniz-Gymnasium in Bad Schwartau where he did his Abitur (A-level) in 1984. After his military service he studied History and Romance Philology. He graduated Magister Artium. During his studies he worked as a corrector and translator for the Carlsen-Verlag. Sick explains in the foreword of the Carlsen anniversary issue "Spirou & Fantasio" that the work experience as a translator and corrector coined his sense for orthography and punctuation.

In 1995 Bastian Sick started working as a documentation journalist in the photo archive of German news magazine Der Spiegel. In 1999 he joined the editorial team of the magazine "Spiegel online" and became a literary editor. In 2003 he became famous as the author of the column "Zwiebelfisch". In those columns he writes in a funny and entertaining way about the case of doubt in the German language, for example grammar, spelling, punctuation, and style.

In 2004 50 of these columns were published in print by Kiepenheuer & Witsch in Cologne. The title of the book called Der Dativ ist dem Genitiv sein Tod (literally The Dative is to the Genitive its Death) use puns employing the his genitive, which is not used in standard German and often considered unaesthetic, instead of the normative genitive case. More than 2 million copies of this book were sold within two years. Two sequels have been published within the same time period. The "Zwiebelfisch" was the first Internet column which became a bestseller after it was published as a book. Besides his columns Bastian Sick published other books about language curiosities, for instance "Happy Aua",[1] part 1–4. From the content of the book series "Der Dativ ist dem Genitiv sein Tod" board games, computer games and calendar were produced.

Sick has done several tours of reading where he also performed as an entertainer. On the 13 of March 2006, Bastian Sick performed in the Cologne Arena in front of an audience of 15.000 people in "the biggest German lesson of the world". He was supported e.g. by Thomas Bug, Joachim Hermann Luger, Jürgen Rüttgers, Frank Plasberg, Frank Rost, Cordula Stratmann, and Annette Frier. Recordings from this event and recordings from his tours were published as audio books. Invited by the Sony BMG in 2007, Bastian Sick published a CD called "Lieder voller Poesie", a homage to the musician and singer Udo Jürgens.

In 2008 Sick hosted a temporary TV show on WDR. With artists like Jochen Busse, Konrad Beikircher and Susanne Pätzold Sick presented in his thirty minutes show oddities out of the language every-day life. In the following year Sick left the Spiegel publishing company and became a self-employed author and speaker. With his program "Nur aus Jux und Tolleranz"[2] he went on tour through Germany in 2011 and 2013. Invited by the Goethe Institute, German schools and other educational establishments Sick did many performances in foreign countries, for example in Montréal (Canada), Hungary, Spain, Portugal, South Tyrol (Italy), Great Britain, and Egypt. He also did a tour in South America with eight performances in six countries in 2008.

Bastian Sick lives and works in Hamburg.

Notable Works

Books

CDs

Singles

External links

Notes and References

  1. A pun of English hour and German Aua, meaning ouch or booboo
  2. A pun of German Tollerei meaning nonsense and German Toleranz meaning tolerance