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Marianne Hauser (December 11, 1910-June 21,2006) was an American novelist, short story writer and journalist. She is best known for the novels ''Prince Ishmael''(1963) about the legendary foundling [[Caspar Hauser]] and ''The Talking Room'' (1976), an experimental novel about a pregnant 13 year old being raised by lesbian parents.
Marianne Hauser (December 11, 1910-June 21,2006) was an American novelist, short story writer and journalist. She is best known for the novels ''Prince Ishmael''(1963) about the legendary foundling [[Caspar Hauser]] and ''The Talking Room'' (1976), an experimental novel about a pregnant 13 year old being raised by lesbian parents.
==Biography==
==Biography==
Marianne Hauser was born in [[Strasbourg]], [[Alsace-Lorraine]].<ref name=HauserPapers>{{cite web|title=Biographical/Historical Note|url=http://www.library.ufl.edu/spec/manuscript/guides/hauser.htm|website=A Guide to the Marianne Hauser Papers|publisher=Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida|accessdate=16 April 2015}}</ref> Her father was a successful patent attorney. The Hausers lived in Strasbourg until the 1920s when they moved to Germany. There she attended high school and enrolled in college but she did not complete a degree. In 1932 she moved to Paris where she wrote her first novel, ''Monique'', in German. ''Monique'' was published in Vienna. Hauser contacted Otto Kleiber, editor of the Swiss newspaper Basler National Zeitung and proposed that he send her overseas to write travel articles. Despite her young age he agreed to do so and she spent the next 5 years traveling through China, Taiwan, Cambodia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Japan and Hawaii, writing a weekly 1200 word [[feuilleton]]. Her experiences in She married Fred Kirchberger, a German émigré, concert pianist and music teacher.<ref name=Autobiography>{{cite book|last1=Hauser|first1=Marianne|title=Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series|date=1990|publisher=Gale Research Co.|location=Detroit, MI}}</ref> She became a citizen in 1944. They had one child, Michael Kirchberger, born in 1945. She published 9 novels (7 in English) and 2 collections of short stories, as well as book reviews for the [[New York Times]], the Saturday Review of Literature, the [[New York Herald Tribune]], the [[New Republic]], the [[American Book Review]] and the [[Sewanee Review]]. Her short stories appeared in [[Harper's Bazaar]], [[Mademoiselle]], the Carleton Miscellany, [[Botteghe Oscure]], the Tiger's Eye and [[Fiction International]]. In 1951 they moved to [[Kirksville, Missouri]], where Fred Kirchberger taught in the music department of the Northeast Missouri State College. In 1962 she and Fred Kirchberger divorced and she returned to live in New York City. From 1966-1978 she was a lecturer in the Department of English at Queens College in New York.<ref name=Autobiography /> <ref name=HauserPapers /> She is best known for the novels Prince Ishmael (Stein and Day, 1963, Sun and Moon Classics, 1991) and The Talking Room (Fiction Collective, 1976).<ref name=Punday>{{cite journal|last1=Punday|first1=Daniel|title=Narrative Order and Representing the Body in ‘The Talking Room|journal=Narrative|date=January 1, 1998|volume=6|issue=1|pages=31-48}}</ref> She was known to her friends as Bear.<ref name=HauserPapers /> Her published works are:
Marianne Hauser was born in [[Strasbourg]], [[Alsace-Lorraine]].<ref name=HauserPapers>{{cite web|title=Biographical/Historical Note|url=http://www.library.ufl.edu/spec/manuscript/guides/hauser.htm|website=A Guide to the Marianne Hauser Papers|publisher=Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida|accessdate=16 April 2015}}</ref> Her mother and father ran a successful patent business. She had two older sisters, Dora and Eva. Dora died of meningitis in 1917. The Hausers lived in Strasbourg until the 1920s when they moved to Berlin. Hauser rebelled against the authoritarian German education system and wa s thrown out of high school. She eventually enrolled in classes at the University of Berlin law school, but didn't complete a degree. In 1932 she moved to Paris where she wrote her first novel, ''Monique'', in German. ''Monique'' was published in Vienna. Hauser contacted Otto Kleiber, editor of the Swiss newspaper Basler National Zeitung and proposed that he send her overseas to write travel articles. Despite her young age he agreed to do so and she spent the next 5 years traveling through China, Taiwan, Cambodia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Japan and Hawaii, writing a weekly 1200 word [[feuilleton]]. Her experiences in She married Fred Kirchberger, a German émigré, concert pianist and music teacher.<ref name=Autobiography>{{cite book|last1=Hauser|first1=Marianne|title=Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series|date=1990|publisher=Gale Research Co.|location=Detroit, MI}}</ref> She became a citizen in 1944. They had one child, Michael Kirchberger, born in 1945. She published 9 novels (7 in English) and 2 collections of short stories, as well as book reviews for the [[New York Times]], the Saturday Review of Literature, the [[New York Herald Tribune]], the [[New Republic]], the [[American Book Review]] and the [[Sewanee Review]]. Her short stories appeared in [[Harper's Bazaar]], [[Mademoiselle]], the Carleton Miscellany, [[Botteghe Oscure]], the Tiger's Eye and [[Fiction International]]. In 1951 they moved to [[Kirksville, Missouri]], where Fred Kirchberger taught in the music department of the Northeast Missouri State College. In 1962 she and Fred Kirchberger divorced and she returned to live in New York City. From 1966-1978 she was a lecturer in the Department of English at Queens College in New York.<ref name=Autobiography /> <ref name=HauserPapers /> She is best known for the novels Prince Ishmael (Stein and Day, 1963, Sun and Moon Classics, 1991) and The Talking Room (Fiction Collective, 1976).<ref name=Punday>{{cite journal|last1=Punday|first1=Daniel|title=Narrative Order and Representing the Body in ‘The Talking Room|journal=Narrative|date=January 1, 1998|volume=6|issue=1|pages=31-48}}</ref> She was known to her friends as Bear.<ref name=HauserPapers /> Her published works are:


=Novels and Collections=
=Novels and Collections=

Revision as of 13:21, 12 May 2015

Marianne Hauser

Marianne Hauser (December 11, 1910-June 21,2006) was an American novelist, short story writer and journalist. She is best known for the novels Prince Ishmael(1963) about the legendary foundling Caspar Hauser and The Talking Room (1976), an experimental novel about a pregnant 13 year old being raised by lesbian parents.

Biography

Marianne Hauser was born in Strasbourg, Alsace-Lorraine.[1] Her mother and father ran a successful patent business. She had two older sisters, Dora and Eva. Dora died of meningitis in 1917. The Hausers lived in Strasbourg until the 1920s when they moved to Berlin. Hauser rebelled against the authoritarian German education system and wa s thrown out of high school. She eventually enrolled in classes at the University of Berlin law school, but didn't complete a degree. In 1932 she moved to Paris where she wrote her first novel, Monique, in German. Monique was published in Vienna. Hauser contacted Otto Kleiber, editor of the Swiss newspaper Basler National Zeitung and proposed that he send her overseas to write travel articles. Despite her young age he agreed to do so and she spent the next 5 years traveling through China, Taiwan, Cambodia, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, India, Japan and Hawaii, writing a weekly 1200 word feuilleton. Her experiences in She married Fred Kirchberger, a German émigré, concert pianist and music teacher.[2] She became a citizen in 1944. They had one child, Michael Kirchberger, born in 1945. She published 9 novels (7 in English) and 2 collections of short stories, as well as book reviews for the New York Times, the Saturday Review of Literature, the New York Herald Tribune, the New Republic, the American Book Review and the Sewanee Review. Her short stories appeared in Harper's Bazaar, Mademoiselle, the Carleton Miscellany, Botteghe Oscure, the Tiger's Eye and Fiction International. In 1951 they moved to Kirksville, Missouri, where Fred Kirchberger taught in the music department of the Northeast Missouri State College. In 1962 she and Fred Kirchberger divorced and she returned to live in New York City. From 1966-1978 she was a lecturer in the Department of English at Queens College in New York.[2] [1] She is best known for the novels Prince Ishmael (Stein and Day, 1963, Sun and Moon Classics, 1991) and The Talking Room (Fiction Collective, 1976).[3] She was known to her friends as Bear.[1] Her published works are:

Novels and Collections

Monique. Zurich: Ringier, 1934. (written in German, lost)

Indisches Gaukelspiel (Shadow Play in India). Vienna: Zinnen, 1937. (an edition was published by an underground press in French, but that is now lost. It has never been translated from German into English)

Dark Dominion. New York: Random House, 1947.

The Choir Invisible. New York: McDowel, Obolensky, 1958. Published in England under original title, The Living Shall Praise Thee. London: Gollancz, 1957.

A Lesson in Music. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1964.

Prince Ishmael. New York: Stein and Day, 1963. Reprinted, Los Angeles: Sun and Moon Classics Series, 1991.

The Talking Room. New York: Fiction Collective, 1976.

The Memoirs of the Late Mr. Ashley: An American Comedy. Los Angeles: Sun and Moon Press, 1986. Trans. In German, Suhrfkamp, 1992.

Me and My Mom. Los Angeles: Sun and Moon Classics, 1993.

Shootout with Father. Normal [Ill.]: FC2, 2002.

The Collected Short Fiction of Marianne Hauser. Normal [Ill.]: FC2 She also wrote and published a story for her granddaughter, Nell Charley, Little Butter Cup, the Happiest Bear in the World, with pictures by artist Joel Fisher and music composed by Fred Kirchberger, in 2003.

Uncollected Stories

“The Colonel’s Daughter.” The Tiger’s Eye 3 (March 1948): 21-34

“The Rubber Doll.” Mademoiselle (1951).

“The Sun and the Colonel’s Button.” Botteghe Oscure 12 (Fall 1953): 255-72

“The Seersucker Suit.” Carleton Miscelany 9 (Fall 1968): 2-14. Reprinted in American Made: New Fiction from the Fiction Collective, ed. Mark Leyner, Curtis White, and Thomas Glynn, 93-106. New York: Fiction Collective, 1986.

“Heartlands Beat.” Fiction International 18, 1 (Spring 1988): 11-22

Nonfiction

“The Indomitable Spirit of Alsace.” Travel 70 (1938): 28 – .

“Swan Song of the Middle Ages.” Travel 72 (1939).

“Pantomime in Blue and Silver.” Travel 72 (1938): 18 – .

“Bamboo, Symbol of Old China.” Travel. 73 (July 1939): 30.

“Successful Small Home That Suits the Environment.” Arts and Decoration 49 (February 1939): 18 – .

“Home Industries of the Swiss Peasants.” Arts and Decoration 50 (April 1939): 22–40.

“Marrakesh: Descent into Spring.” Harper’s Bazaar, 3054 (May 1966): 188-203.

“Mimoun of the Mellah.” Harper’s Bazaar, 3061 (December 1966): 114-82.

She published an autobiographical entry About My Life So Far in the Contemporary Author’s Series, Volume 11, Gale (Detroit), 1990.

Her interview with Larry McCaffery is published in Some Other Frequency.

Hauser’s papers are housed at the University of Florida, Gainesville.

Critical Studies

Caserio, Robert L. Supreme Court Versus Homosexual Fiction South Atlantic Quarterly, 88.1 (1989):269-99

Dillon, Steven. Wolf-Women and Phantom Ladies: Female Desire in 1940s US Culture. Albany: State Univ of New York Pr, 2015.

Friedman, Ellen G. and Miriam Fuchs, eds Breaking the Sequence: Women’s Experimental Fiction Princeton, NJ : Princeton University Press, 1989

Gregory, Sinda. Contemporary Novelists. Sixth. Detroit, MI: St. James Press, 1996.

Harris, Andrea L. Other Sexes: Rewriting Difference from Woolf to Winterson Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2000

Punday, Daniel. “Narrative Order and Representing the Body in ‘The Talking Room.’” Narrative 6, no. 1 (January 1, 1998): 31–48.

Ziareck, Ewa ‘Taking Chances’: The Feminine Genealogy of Style in Marianne Hauser’s The Talking Room Contemporary Literature, 33 (1992): 480-501

Obituaries

Federman. Raymond: "Marianne Hauser has Changed Tense." at: Jdeshell. “Now What: Marianne Hauser Changed Tense.” Now What, June 23, 2006. http://nowwhatblog.blogspot.com/2006/06/marianne-hauser-changed-tense.html.

Messerli, Douglas Greenintegerblog. “American Cultural Treasures - ACT: A WAR AGAINST DEATH.” American Cultural Treasures - ACT, February 4, 2010. http://americanculturaltreasures.blogspot.com/2010/02/war-against-death.html.

“Marianne Hauser--1910-2006.” American Book Review 27, no. 6 (October 2006).

Interviews

McCaffery, Larry. Some Other Frequency: Interviews with Innovative American Authors. Penn Studies in Contemporary American Fiction. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996.

Mifflin, Margot. “Dreams and the Writer.” DREAMWORKS 2, no. 4 (1982): 255–59.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Biographical/Historical Note". A Guide to the Marianne Hauser Papers. Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b Hauser, Marianne (1990). Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Co.
  3. ^ Punday, Daniel (January 1, 1998). "Narrative Order and Representing the Body in 'The Talking Room". Narrative. 6 (1): 31–48.

Gregory, Sinda. Contemporary Novelists. Sixth. Detroit, MI: St. James Press, 1996.

Hauser, Marianne. Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series. Vol. 11. Detroit, MI: Gale Research Co, 1990.

Marianne Hauser Papers, Special and Area Studies Collections, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.

McCaffery, Larry. Some Other Frequency: Interviews with Innovative American Authors. Penn Studies in Contemporary American Fiction. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996.

Links

http://www.library.ufl.edu/spec/manuscript/guides/hauser.htm

http://biography.jrank.org/pages/4410/Hauser-Marianne.html

http://americanculturaltreasures.blogspot.com/2010/02/war-against-death.html

http://nowwhatblog.blogspot.com/2006/06/marianne-hauser-changed-tense.html?showComment=1151251500000#c115125151168109218