Lindita Arapi (born 30 June 1972) is an Albanian writer and journalist. She is cited as a noteworthy example of a generation of female Albanian writers. [1] Together with her contemporaries, Ervin Hatibi, Agron Tufa, and Rudian Zekthi, Arapi is one of Albania's present-day literary avant-garde writers. [2] She has been living in Germany since the late 1990s, where she has published several volumes of poetry. Her first book of poetry, Am Meer, nachts ("By the sea, at night"; 2007) was the first book of poetry written by a female Albanian poet in German. [3] Her first novel, Vajzat me çelës në qafë (2010), translated into German in 2012, [4] was awarded a Book of the Year prize in Albania.
Born in Lushnjë, Arapi studied the Albanian language and literature at the University of Tirana from 1990 to 1994. In 1993, Arapi published her first book of poems. Three years later, she moved to Germany, where she studied German in Cologne. [5] That same year, 1996, she received a scholarship from the Heinrich Böll Foundation and served as an Honorary Fellow in Writing at the University of Iowa. [2] It was followed by a doctorate in journalism (another source states Cultural Studies) [3] at the University of Vienna. In 2010, she published her first novel, and also translated some German-language texts into Albanian, including poems by Günter Grass, Joseph Roth, Elias Canetti and Felicitas Hoppe. As a journalist, Arapi has worked as a freelance radio editor [6] for the Albanian program of Deutsche Welle, [5] serving as a correspondent in Vienna. [7] She was one of 19 authors featured at the Berlin International Literature Festival in 2012. [8]
Arapi resides in Bonn. She is married and has two daughters. [3]
Flora Brovina is a Kosovar Albanian poet, pediatrician and women's rights activist. She was born in the town of Skenderaj in the Drenica Valley of Kosovo, and was raised in Pristina, where she went to school and began studying medicine. After finishing her university studies in Zagreb, where she specialized in pediatrics, she returned to Kosovo and worked for a time as a journalist for the Albanian-language daily newspaper Rilindja. Soon thereafter, she returned to the health care profession and worked for many years in the Pediatrics Ward of the Pristina General Hospital.
Ilse Aichinger was an Austrian writer known for her accounts of her persecution by the Nazis because of her Jewish ancestry. She wrote poems, short stories and radio plays, and won multiple European literary prizes.
Herta Müller is a Romanian-German novelist, poet, essayist and recipient of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Literature. She was born in Nițchidorf, Timiș County in Romania; her native language is German. Since the early 1990s, she has been internationally established, and her works have been translated into more than twenty languages.
Marcel Beyer is a German writer.
Thomas Glavinic is an Austrian writer. With Kathrin Röggla and Daniel Kehlmann, he is among other contemporary Austrian authors being perceived as significantly shaping the literary discussion in Austria.
Friederike Mayröcker was an Austrian writer of poetry and prose, audio plays, children's books and dramatic texts. She experimented with language, and was regarded as an avantgarde poet, and as one of the leading authors in German. Her work, inspired by art, music, literature and everyday life, appeared as "novel and also dense text formations, often described as 'magical'." According to The New York Times, her work was "formally inventive, much of it exploiting the imaginative potential of language to capture the minutiae of daily life, the natural world, love and grief".
Jenny Erpenbeck is a German writer and opera director, recipient of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize.
Ben Blushi is an Albanian politician, writer and journalist.
Nora Bossong is a German writer. She lives in Berlin.
Lidija Dimkovska, born 1971, is a Macedonian poet, novelist and translator. She was born in Skopje and studied comparative literature at the University of Skopje. She proceeded to obtain a PhD in Romanian literature at the University of Bucharest. She has taught Macedonian language and literature at the University of Bucharest and world literature at the University of Nova Gorica in Slovenia.
Sabine Derflinger is an Austrian film director, screenwriter, producer and dramaturgical consultant. She lives and works in Vienna and Berlin. Many of her films have won several awards, notably Geraubte Kindheit, Vollgas, Kleine Schwester, 42plus and Tag und Nacht. She is also well known for directing a number of films in the cult series Tatort.
Ulrike Draesner is a German author. She was awarded the 2016 Nicolas Born Prize.
Klara Buda is a French Albanian journalist and writer. She is the former head of the Albanian Department of Radio France Internationale (RFI), which she left in 2010. Buda has also worked for UNESCO and the BBC. She is of French nationality and Albanian ethnicity. Buda writes prose, poetry, fiction and TV plays.
Andrea Heuser is a German writer, poet, translator and literary scholar.
Anna Weidenholzer is an Austrian journalist and writer.
Kathrin Schmidt, is a German writer. She is known both for her poetry and prose.
Ralph Hammerthaler is a German writer.
Anja Kampmann is a German poet and author.
Christa Ludwig is a German teacher, writer and editor, specializing in books for young people. She taught at Schule Schloss Salem before turning to freelance writing. After books and series related to horses, a novel about the Jerusalem years of Else Lasker-Schüler was published in 2018. She received the Eichendorff-Literaturpreis.
Barbara Yelin is a German cartoonist who has won several awards in Germany including the Bayerischer Kunstförderpreis, Max & Moritz Prize, and the Ernst-Hoferichter-Preis. As an educator, she has been affiliated with Hochschule der Bildenden Künste Saar and University of Applied Arts Vienna.