Monique Schwitter Explained

Monique Schwitter
Birth Date:1972
Birth Place:Zurich, Switzerland
Nationality:Swiss / German
Known For:Novel Eins im Andern (2015)
Occupation:Writer and actress

Monique Schwitter (born 2 March 1972) is a Swiss writer and actress.

Life and career

Schwitter was born in Zürich, Switzerland.[1] She studied stage direction and theater at the Mozarteum Salzburg from 1993 to 1997. Having graduated, she worked as an actress at top-level houses for five years, such as the Schauspielhaus Zürich, the Schauspiel Frankfurt, and Schauspielhaus Graz. She was then an ensemble member at the Deutsches Schauspielhaus in Hamburg.[2] Throughout that period, she was a reciter, a dubbing actor and directed and produced several literary features about Peter Handke, Ernst Jandl, Raymond Queneau, and Sarah Kane. At the Deutsche Schauspielhaus she curated a literary salon and performed as a blues singer. In her acting career, she regularly was part of numerous theater festivals, such as Mülheimer Theatertagen (1999), "Reich und Berühmt" in Berlin (2001), "Theater der Welt" in Stuttgart (2005), Vienna Festival (2006), Salzburg Festival (2006), "Theaterformen" in Hannover (2007) and Berliner Theatertreffen (2008).

Starting 2002, she contributed prose and short stories in various literary magazines. After the editor Alfred Kolleritsch had become interested in her work, she published much of her early work in the Austrian literary magazine Manuskripte. Her first collection of short stories, Wenn's schneit beim Krokodil, was published in 2005 and was awarded the Robert-Walser Preis (2006) and a prize by the Deutsche Schillerstiftung. In 2008, the theater Lucerne comissed the piece Himmels-W, which premiered there on April 3, 2008. In the same year, she was invited to participate in the 2008 Max Frisch Symposium in Brussels. Her debut novel Ohren haben keine Lider was also released in 2008 and was translated into Chinese in 2010 for the Expo in Shanghai. Her second volume of short stories, Goldfish Memory (German: Goldfischgedächtnis|links=no), was launched in 2011. In 2010, Monique Schwitter decided to end her acting career, in order to pursue writing full-time.

Nominated by Hildegard Elisabeth Keller, she took part at the Festival of German-Language Literature (Ingeborg-Bachmann-Prize) in 2015.[3] Her novel Eins im Andern was short listed for the German Book Prize (German: Deutscher Buchpreis|links=no)[4] and received the Swiss Book Prize (German: Schweizer Buchpreis|links=no.[5] The novel is about a forty-year-old woman who during a random google search discovers that her first love had committed suicide many years ago. Learning this, she recounts the biography of her love life by telling the story of twelve previous lovers. In 2016, it was awarded the Swiss Literary Prize (German: Schweizer Literaturpreis|links=no).[6]

Her work has been translated into several languages, including French, Danish, Italian, Dutch, Chinese, Russian, Polish, and English.

Schwitter lives in Hamburg with her family since 2005.[7]

After being a member of the Freie Akademie der Künste Hamburg since 2012, she was elected president in 2021.[8] [9]

Published works

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Monique Schwitter - Autorenlexikon . literaturport.de . 12 September 2011 . de . 7 August 2020.
  2. Web site: Monique Schwitter . ansichten.srf.ch . de . 7 August 2020.
  3. Web site: Autoren – Bachmannpreis 2015 . 28 May 2015 . bachmannpreis.orf.at . 8 April 2016.
  4. Web site: Shortlist 2015: Eins im Andern . 9 January 2024 . Deutscher Buchpreis.
  5. http://www.srf.ch/kultur/literatur/monique-schwitter-wird-mit-dem-schweizer-buchpreis-2015-geehrt Monique Schwitter wird mit dem Schweizer Buchpreis 2015 geehrt
  6. http://www.bak.admin.ch/aktuelles/03123/05447/05732/index.html?lang=de Das Bundesamt für Kultur vergibt die Schweizer Literaturpreise 2016
  7. Web site: Hamburg . Hamburger Abendblatt- . 2021-03-31 . Hamburger Schriftstellerin führt jetzt Akademie der Künste . 2024-01-08 . www.abendblatt.de . de-DE.
  8. Web site: Freie Akademie der Künste Hamburg – Alles über die Akademie . 2024-01-09 . Freie Akademie der Künste Hamburg . de-DE.
  9. Web site: Hamburg . Hamburger Abendblatt- . 2021-03-31 . Hamburger Schriftstellerin führt jetzt Akademie der Künste . 2024-01-09 . www.abendblatt.de . de-DE.
  10. News: Cammann . Alexander . 6 August 2015 . Männer-Fantasie . . Hamburg . de . 7 August 2020.