Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach was an Austrian writer. Noted for her excellent psychological novels, she is regarded as one of the most important German-language writers of the latter portion of the 19th century.
Biography
Early life and family
She was born at the castle of the Dubský family in Zdislavice near Kroměříž in Moravia, the daughter of Baron Dubsky, a nobleman whose family roots are deeply Catholic and Bohemian, and his wife Maria, née Baroness von Vockel, who came from a noble Protestant-Saxon background. Marie lost her mother in early infancy, but received a careful intellectual training from two stepmothers, first Eugenie Bartenstein, and then her second step-mother, Xaverine Kolowrat-Krakowsky, who often contributed to her inspiration by taking her to the ''Burgtheater from time to time in Vienna. Despite being part of a noble family having access to her family's vast libraries, she was never actually formally schooled. However, because of her curiosity, access to information, and educated family, she became auto-didact at a young age, and was taught fluent French, German, and Czech. In 1848 she married her cousin, :de:Moritz von Ebner-Eschenbach|Moritz von Ebner-Eschenbach, a physics and chemistry professor at a Viennese engineering academy. Later on, he would become an Austrian captain, and subsequently a field-marshal. The couple resided first in Vienna, then at Louka tow. near Znojmo, where her husband had been my his military superiors, and after 1860 again in Vienna. The marriage was childless to disappointment of both of them. Marie grappled with the domestic taskd. She kept a journal and wrote letters explaining how she felt unsatisfied. It has been speculated that Marie may have suffered from "hysteria" including debilitating headaches and excessive nervousness.
Career and success
Marie began devoting herself to literary work. In her endeavours she received assistance and encouragement from Franz Grillparzer and Freiherr von Münch-Bellinghausen. Her first publicized work was the drama Maria Stuart in Scotland, which Philipp Eduard Devrient produced at the Karlsruhe theatre in 1860. Then came a tragedy in five acts, Marie Roland, with several one-act dramas: Doktor Ritter, Violets, and The Disconsolate One. Though she was encouraged to keep writing, her relative failure in the field of playwriting had actually become somewhat of a point of an embarrassment to her family. After these limited successes in the field of drama, she turned to narrative. Commencing with Die Prinzessin von Banalien, she graphically depicts in Božena and Das Gemeindekind the surroundings of her Moravian home, and in Lotti, die Uhrmacherin, Zwei Comtessen, Unsühnbar and Glaubenslos? the life of the Austrian aristocracy in town and country. Much of Ebner-Eschenbach's more mainstream success is accredited to Julius Rodenberg due to his publishing Ebner-Eschenbach's work in his popular periodical, Die Deutsche Rundschau. She also published Neue Erzählungen, Aphorismen and Parabeln, Märchen und Gedichte. Von Ebner-Eschenbach's elegance of style, her incisive wit and masterly depiction of character give her a foremost place among the German women writers of her time. On the occasion of her 70th birthday the university of Vienna conferred upon her the degree of doctor of philosophy, honoris causa. An edition of Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach's Gesammelte Schriften began to appear in 1893. Throughout her life, she had never created literature or plays for monetary reasons, and so, in her will, she left, as to aid other writers in their own endeavors, the compensation she had received. She died in Vienna, Austria-Hungary. The Marie Ebner-Eschenbach park in Währing, Vienna, is named after her.
Works
Aus Franzensbad. 6 Episteln von keinem Propheten. Leipzig: Lorck, 1858
Maria Stuart in Schottland. Drama in five acts. Vienna: Ludwig Mayer, 1860
Das Veilchen. Comedy in one act. Vienna: Wallishausser, 1861
Marie Roland. Tragedy in five acts. Vienna: Wallishausser, 1867
Doktor Ritter. Dramatic poem in one act. Vienna: Jasper, 1869
Die Prinzessin von Banalien. A fairy tale. Vienna: Rosner, 1872
Das Waldfräulein, 1873
Božena. A story. Stuttgart: Cotta, 1876
Die Freiherren von Gemperlein, 1878
Lotti, die Uhrmacherin, in: "Deutsche Rundschau", 1880
Aphorismen. Berlin: Franz Ebhardt, 1880
Dorf- und Schloßgeschichten, 1883
Zwei Comtessen. A story. Berlin: Franz Ebhardt, 1885
Neue Dorf- und Schloßgeschichten. Stories. Berlin: Paetel, 1886
Das Gemeindekind Novel. 1887
Unsühnbar. A story. Berlin: Paetel, 1890
Drei Novellen. 1892
Glaubenslos? A story. Berlin: Paetel, 1893
Das Schädliche. Die Totenwacht. Two stories. Berlin: Paetel, 1894
Rittmeister Brand. Bertram Vogelweid. Two stories. Berlin: Paetel, 1896
Alte Schule A story. Berlin: Paetel, 1897
Am Ende. Scene in one act. Berlin: Bloch, 1897
Aus Spätherbsttagen. Stories. Berlin: Paetel, 1901
Agave. Novel. Berlin: Paetel, 1903
Die unbesiegbare Macht. Two stories. Berlin: Paetel, 1905