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Gert Hofmann (29 January 1931 – 1 July 1993) was a German writer and professor of German literature.
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Hofmann was born and grew up in Limbach, Saxony (Germany) which, after World War II, became part of East Germany. In 1948, he moved with his family to Leipzig. There, he attended a school for translators and interpreters, studying English and Russian. In 1950, he enrolled to Leipzig University, where he studied Romance languages and Slavic languages. In 1951, he fled from the German Democratic Republic and settled in Freiburg im Breisgau, where he continued his studies. In 1957, he graduated with a thesis on Henry James.
Hofmann began his writing career as a writer of radio plays. After one year as a research assistant at the University of Freiburg, he left Germany in 1961 for Bristol to teach German literature. Over the next ten years he taught at universities in Europe in Toulouse, Paris, Edinburgh, and in the United States at New Haven, Berkeley, California and Austin.
From 1971 to 1980 he lived in the southern Austrian town of Klagenfurt, while teaching at the University of Ljubljana in Slovenia, former Yugoslavia.
In 1980, aged 49, he returned to Germany, moving to Erding near Munich, becoming a novelist. He died of a stroke in 1993.[1]
A number of Hofmann's works have been translated by his son, the poet Michael Hofmann (*1957 in Freiburg). Die Denunziation(1979) and Veilchenfeld(1986) are concerned with The Holocaust.[2]
Hofmann received several literary awards during his lifetime including the Ingeborg-Bachmann-Preis for Die Fistelstimme (1979), the Alfred-Döblin-Preis (1982), and the Hörspielpreis der Kriegsblinden for Die Brautschau des Dichters Robert Walser im Hof der Anstaltswäscherei von Bellelay, Kanton Bern (1983). In 1987, he became a member of the Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung in Darmstadt. He received the Literaturpreis der Stadt München in 1993. In 1995, Hofmann and his son Michael won the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize for The Film Explainer.
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