Albin Zollinger (24 January 1895 – 7 November 1941) was a
Swiss
Swiss may refer to:
* the adjectival form of Switzerland
* Swiss people
Places
* Swiss, Missouri
* Swiss, North Carolina
*Swiss, West Virginia
* Swiss, Wisconsin
Other uses
*Swiss-system tournament, in various games and sports
*Swiss Internation ...
writer.
Life
Born in
Zürich, Albin Zollinger was the son of a precision mechanic and grew up in
Rüti, Zürich
Rüti (sometimes written as ''Rüti ZH'' in order to distinguish it from other "Rütis") is a Swiss town and a municipality in the district of Hinwil in the canton of Zürich. The river Jona flows through the town.
History
In 807, Rüti's ...
and
Argentina, where his parents unsuccessfully tried to establish a secure existence for the family. He attended the teacher’s seminar in
Küsnacht and eventually, after a series of job changes, got a permanent position in
Oerlikon, which he held until his death. His first novel was published in 1921.
All of Zollinger's works, his novels, narratives, poems, essays, articles, reviews, and letters, were written alongside his work as a teacher, his military service, his public engagements in the Swiss Writers' Association, and his work as an editor for “Die Zeit” and later “Nation”, and despite a family crisis and depression (his marriage ended in divorce after a few years).
His preferred place to write was in the Zürich's cafés, where he travelled from Oerlikon by tram after school. During the 1930s, his little marble table at the Café "Terrasse" achieved some local fame. There he met other Zürich writers, e.g. professor of literature
Fritz Ernst, literary reviewer
Bernhard Diebold, his friend
Traugott Vogel or
Rudolf Jakob Humm. Three weeks before his death at the age of 46, Zollinger met the young
Max Frisch on the
Pfannenstiel Pfannenstiel may refer to:
People
*Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (1862–1909), German gynecologist who was a native of Berlin (see ''Pfannenstiel incision'')
*Jackalyne Pfannenstiel (born 1947), United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Insta ...
. Frisch mentioned the meeting in his diary (“Tagebuch 1946-1949“).
Zollinger died in Zürich, and is buried in an honorary grave at the “Nordheim” cemetery in
Oerlikon. A square in Oerlikon was named after him in 1980. Albin Zollinger’s literary legacy is administrated by the
Zentralbibliothek Zürich.
List of works
* ''Die Gärten des Königs'', novel, 1921 (literally: „The King's Gardens“)
* ''Der halbe Mensch'', novel, 1929 (literally: „The Half Man“)
* ''Gedichte'', 1933 („Poems“)
* ''Sternfrühe'', poems, 1936 (literally: „Bright and Early“)
* ''Stille des Herbstes'', poems, 1939 (literally: „Silence of Fall“)
* ''Haus des Lebens'', poems, 1939 (literally: „House of Life“)
* ''Die große Unruhe'', novel, 1939 (literally: „The Big Unrest“)
* ''
Pfannenstiel Pfannenstiel may refer to:
People
*Hermann Johannes Pfannenstiel (1862–1909), German gynecologist who was a native of Berlin (see ''Pfannenstiel incision'')
*Jackalyne Pfannenstiel (born 1947), United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Insta ...
. Die Geschichte eines Bildhauers'', novel, 1940 (literally: „Pfannenstiel. The Story of a Sculptor“).
Suhrkamp
Suhrkamp Verlag is a German publishing house, established in 1950 and generally acknowledged as one of the leading European publishers of fine literature. Its roots go back to the "arianized" part of the S. Fischer Verlag.
In January 2010 the ...
-Taschenbuch, Frankfurt am Main 1990.
* ''Bohnenblust oder Die Erzieher'', novel, 1941 (literally: „Bohnenblust or The Educators“)
* ''Der Fröschlacher Kuckuck. Leben und Taten einer Stadt in zwanzig Abenteuern'', 1941 (literally: „The cuckoo of Fröschlach. Life and deeds of a city in twenty adventures“)
Further reading
* Isabelle Chopin: ''Albin Zollinger. Entre politique et poésie (1933-1939).'' Bern u.a.: Lang 2000. (= Contacts; Sér. 3, Etudes et documents; 50)
* Maria Adèle Hafner: ''Die Gestalt des Lehrers in Albin Zollingers Romanen "Pfannenstiel" und "Bohnenblust" und in E. Y. Meyers Roman "Die Rückfahrt".'' Zürich: Bokos 1995.
* Thorbjörn Lengborn: ''Schriftsteller und Gesellschaft in der Schweiz. Eine Studie zur Behandlung der Gesellschaftsproblematik bei Zollinger, Frisch und Dürrenmatt.'' Frankfurt: Athenäum-Verl. 1972.
* Ingrid Scheffler: ''Albin Zollinger,
Max Frisch und
Friedrich Dürrenmatt als Publizisten und ihr Verhältnis zu den Medien.'' Frankfurt am Main u.a.: Lang 1986. (= Beiträge zur Literatur und Literaturwissenschaft des 20. Jahrhunderts; 7)
External links
*
Texts of Albin Zollinger (Projekt Gutenberg-DE)*
Albin Zollinger' In: Datenbank Projekt Historic Novel. University of Innsbruck.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Zollinger, Albin
Swiss male novelists
Swiss male poets
20th-century Swiss novelists
20th-century Swiss poets
20th-century male writers
Swiss poets in German
1895 births
1941 deaths
Rüti, Zürich