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Ludwig Anzengruber

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The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Anzengruber, Ludwig

 

Born Nov. 29, 1839, in Vienna; died Dec. 10, 1889, in Vienna. Austrian playwright and prose writer.

Anzengruber was an itinerant actor and began his literary activity with the play The Priest from Kirchfeld (1870), which unmasked the despotism of the Vatican. A critical realist in his artistic method, Anzengruber in his play The Peasant Perjurer (1871), his novel The Spot of Shame (1876), and his play The Fourth Commandment (1878) depicted the prejudices which cripple the lives of so-called illegitimate children. He also depicted capitalist exploitation and the moral degradation of the bourgeois family.

WORKS

Sämtliche Werke, vols. 1–15. Vienna-Leipzig, 1920–22.
In Russian translation:
Rasskazy. Moscow, 1900.

REFERENCES

Büchner, A. Zu Ludwig Anzengrubers Dramatechnik. Darmstadt, 1911.
David, J. J. Anzengruber. Berlin-Leipzig, [1904].
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
Even better is the chapter on Austrian writers, which acknowledges the philo-Semitism of Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach and reveals the contradictions in the lives and works of Ludwig Anzengruber and Ferdinand von Saar, culminating in a defence of the latter's great story Seligmann Hirsch (1889) as philo-Semitic.
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