Rüdiger Schmidt-Grépály Explained

Rüdiger Schmidt-Grépály (born 13 July 1952 in Bad Oldesloe, Schleswig-Holstein) is a German cultural manager and Director of the Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche at the Klassik Stiftung Weimar.[1]

Research and academic career

After leaving school in 1972, he studied philosophy, politics and literature in Kiel, Freiburg im Breisgau and Marburg until 1980. In 1980, he successfully completed a doctorate on the early work of Friedrich Nietzsche under the direction of Hans Heinz Holz, Gert Mattenklott and Katharina Kanthack.[2] From 1983 to 1985, holding grants from the German Academic Exchange Service and the Italian foreign ministry, he worked in Florence with Mazzino Montinari, who was editing the first Nietzsche edition free of falsifications, based on the studies he had been carrying out in Weimar since the 1960s.

Until 1997, Schmidt-Grépály lectured in philosophy at the Universities of Florence, Kiel, Oldenburg and Bremen, then from 1998 at Jena and the Bauhaus University, Weimar. From 1989 to 1995 he was the Philosophical Director of the "Karl Jaspers Vorlesungen zu Fragen der Zeit" at the University of Oldenburg under Rudolf zur Lippe. In 1994 Schmidt-Grépály worked at Theater Bremen together with the pioneer of German dance theatre, Johannes Kresnik. He occasionally presented the radio programme "Doppelkopf" on hr2 for Hessischer Rundfunk in conversation with guests such as Nike Wagner, Almos Csongár and Ágnes Heller. In 1999 Schmidt-Grépály organised a Nietzsche evening in Brussels with the title "Ich bin kein Mensch, ich bin Dynamit" (Friedrich Nietzsche) as one of the official contributions by the State of Thuringia to celebrating the German Presidency of the European Union. Involved in the Nietzsche event were the actors Silvia Fink and Harald Schwaiger of the Deutsches Nationaltheater Weimar, and Luise Härtwig, alumna of the Musikgymnasium Weimar. The play was subsequently performed in Weimar, Naumburg, Munich, Lyon and elsewhere.[3]

Founding of the Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche

In 1992, with the idea of turning the Villa Silberblick, the legendary former Nietzsche Archive,[4] into a venue for free spirits in Nietzsche's sense,[5] Schmidt-Grépály came to Weimar.[6] After working for the Stiftung Weimarer Klassik from 1993 to 1999 first as a freelance collaborator, in October 1999 Schmidt-Grépály was appointed Director of the Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche. For his initiative in founding and building up the Kolleg he was awarded the "Premio Internazionale Federico Nietzsche" by the "Associazione Internazionale di Studi e Ricerche Federico Nietzsche" (Palermo, Italy) in 2002. Shortly after celebrating its 10th anniversary, the Kolleg was nominated Weimar's first "Ort der Vielfalt" (Place of Diversity) in January 2012.[7]

Bibliography

Further reading

References

  1. http://www.klassik-stiftung.de/index.php?id=456 Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche.
  2. Dissertation: Ein Text ohne Ende für den Denkenden. 1st edition 1982, 2nd expanded edition 1989, Frankfurt am Main, .
  3. http://www.berliner-zeitung.de/archiv/naumburg-feiert-friedrich-nietzsche-warum-ich-ein-schicksal-bin,10810590,9825388.html Naumburg feiert Friedrich Nietzsche: Warum ich ein Schicksal bin.
  4. http://www.klassik-stiftung.de/index.php?id=344 Nietzsche Archive
  5. See: Rolf Wiggershaus: Das Nietzsche-Archiv heute - Eine Werkstatt für freie Geister. Ein Gespräch mit Rüdiger Schmidt, Leiter des Weimarer Nietzsche-Kollegs. In: dtv Nietzsche magazin. Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, Munich 1999, p. 44f.
  6. Gelebter Nietzsche in Weimar ... In: Julia Wagner and Stefan Wilke (eds.): Die Glücklichen sind neugierig. Zehn Jahre Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche. Weimar 2009, pp. 16 ff. (online at logeion.net)
  7. http://stadt.weimar.de/aktuell/presse/mitteilung/lang/kolleg-friedrich-nietzsche-weimars-erster-ort-der-vielfalt-2010-und-kolleg-friedrich-nietzsche-s/ Kolleg Friedrich Nietzsche: Weimars erster Ort der Vielfalt 2010.

External links