Marianne Fritz


Marianne Fritz was an Austrian writer and novelist. She is known for her multi-volume series of novels dealing with the history of Austria in the twentieth century. Her work is noted for its experimental nature and extraordinary length.

Life

Marianne Fritz was born in Weiz, a municipality in Styria, Austria. In the 1970s, she married the writer Wolfgang Fritz and moved to Vienna, where she would live the rest of her life. In 1978, she published her first novel Die Schwerkraft der Verhältnisse, for which she was awarded that year's Robert Walser Prize.
The publication of this novel marked the beginning of a massive, multi-volume project referred to as Die Festung. This project was based on the history of the First and Second Austrian Republics. She would work on it for the rest of her life.
She published her second novel and the first volume of this project in 1980 as Das Kind der Gewalt und die Sterne der Romani. This complex novel sold poorly, leading her publisher to drop her.
She next published Dessen Sprache du nicht verstehst in 1985. The 3,000 plus page novel was noted for its complexity and linguistic experimentation. The work was received with mostly hostile reviews at the time.
She continued to push the linguistic boundaries of German with the publication in the 1990s of two additional volumes of Die Festung under the names Naturgemäß I and II.
Marianne Fritz died in 2007 in Vienna at the age of 58 after a serious blood infection. At the time of her death, she left behind an unfinished draft for Naturgemäß III.
In November 2014, a park was named in her honor in Wien-Neubau.

In German