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Max Rychner

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Rychner, Max
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Type
Person
Gender
Male
Date of birth
1897-04-08
Place of birth
Lichtensteig
Date of death
1965-06-10
Place of death
Zurich

Wikipedia

Max Rychner (8 April 1897 in Lichtensteig, Switzerland – 10 June 1965 in Zurich) - was a Swiss writer, journalist, translator, and literary critic, writing in German. Hannah Arendt called him "[O]ne of the most educated and subtle figures in the intellectual life of the era"

Rychner published several books of poetry, short stories, essays, and autobiographical prose, and translated some of the works of Paul Valéry into German. For several decades, he was one of the most influential literary critics and reviewers writing in German. He admired, promoted, and published the works of Robert Walser, and corresponded with Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Thomas Mann, Gottfried Benn, Ernst Robert Curtius, and others.

He championed the young poet Paul Celan and published the memoirs of Walter Benjamin.

In 1956, Rychner won the Gottfried Keller Award.

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Annotation

Swiss writer, journalist, translator and literary critic.

Last modified: 2023-12-26 (revision #165744)

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Identifiers

LibraryThing Author
rychnermax
VIAF
59208103
Wikidata ID
Q117997

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Last Modified
2024-04-17