Marie-Luise Gansberg

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Marie Luise Gansberg
in 1960 at the Berlin radio tower
BornMay 4, 1933
DiedFebruary 3, 2003
NationalityGerman
OccupationProfessor
EmployerUniversity of Marburg

Marie-Luise Gansberg (4 May 1933, Bremen — 3 February 2003, Marburg) was a German literary scholar. From 1972, she was the first female professor at the Institute for Modern German Literature at the University of Marburg.[1]

Life and work[edit]

After a one-year commercial school education in Bremen, Gansberg studied German, English and social sciences at the universities of Göttingen, Hamburg, Marburg and Heidelberg from the summer semester of 1954.[2] In 1962, she obtained her doctorate under Friedrich Sengle, who made her his research assistant. She began teaching at the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg in the winter semester of 1962/63. In 1965, she moved to the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in the same capacity. As a result of negative reactions, especially after the assistants' flyer campaign at the end of the winter semester 1968/69,[3] she was transferred to the Philipps University of Marburg in 1970, where she was appointed Academic Councillor in 1971 and Professor in 1972 by way of transfer. Her early retirement (July 1993) is said to have been related to the high number of absences due to illness.

The first contacts between Gansberg and the Sozialistischer Deutscher Studentenbund can be traced back to the winter semester of 1964/65. In Munich, she and her colleague friend, the Germanist medievalist and Marxist Paul Gerhard Völker (1939–2011)[4] were invited to take part in the "Sozialwissenschaftliche Reihe des SDS ★ WS 66/67": Gansberg spoke on "German Exile Literature - a Tabooed Fact", Völker on "How Reactionary is German Studies?". The three essays uniting Methodenkritik der Germanistik. Materialistische Literaturtheorie und bürgerliche Praxis]],[5] published in the "Texte Metzler" series, suddenly made the rebellious duo known to the intellectual public of the old Federal Republic.[6]

A three-day interview marathon with Christa Reinig (1926-2008) resulted in the book Erkennen, was die Rettung ist. Christa Reinig im Gespräch mit Marie Luise Gansberg und Mechthild Beerlage (1986). The volume changed the image of the German-German writer in the scant research on Reinig that existed at the time. Gansberg was the only female professor to take part in the "3rd Siegen Colloquium on Homosexuality and Literature" (October 12–15, 1990) and gave a lecture in Zurich on April 3 of the same year on "Useless Women? 'Old maid', 'old woman', 'lesbian' in literature and what can still become of them."[7]

On June 20, 2018, as part of the web project "1968 in German Literary Studies", Gansberg was presented to a wider public for the first time as a woman of 1968 from the field of German studies.

In the second half of the 1970s, along with Silvia Bovenschen and Renate Möhrmann, she was one of the founders of the Feminist Literary Studies research field in German-speaking countries. She was related to the reform pedagogue Fritz Gansberg, who died in 1950.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Thanks to the Hessian personnel structure reform, Monika Rössing-Hager (* 1933) was also appointed professor in 1972 (her place of work was the Institute for Germanic Languages and Literatures at Philipps University). She and Gansberg were the only female professors with permanent positions at their respective institutes for a very long period of time. The first female professor at Philipps University to be employed as a civil servant, the linguist Luise Berthold (1891–1983), left the teaching staff in 1957 (cf. Luise Berthold: Experiences and Fought. A Review, Marburg: Self-published 1969), who was appointed in 1952 Educational scientist Elisabeth Blochmann (1892–1972) 1960.
  2. ^ Marie Luise Gansberg: Der Prosa-Wortschatz des deutschen Realismus. Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des vorausgehenden Sprachwandels 1835–1855, Heidelberg, Philosophische Fakultät, Dissertation vom 22. Juni 1962, ungezählte Seite nach S. 313 (Lebenslauf). Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main, Signatur: U 64.6186.
  3. ^ Die Mitverfasser des dreiseitigen Handzettels waren Hans-Wolf Jäger, Werner Weiland und Paul-Gerhard Völker.
  4. ^ Völker war zu dieser Zeit Lehrbeauftragter für Sprach- und Interpretationsübungen zur deutschen Literatur des Mittelalters an der LMU München.
  5. ^ Stuttgart: Metzler 1970, 4., teilw. überarb. Aufl. [10.‒13. Tsd.] 1973.
  6. ^ Fotis Jannidis: Marxistische Literaturwissenschaft, in: Reallexikon der deutschen Literaturwissenschaft. Neubearbeitung des Reallexikons der deutschen Literaturgeschichte, Bd. 2: H–O, Berlin u. New York/NY: De Gruyter 2000, S. 541–546, hier S. 545; vgl. ebd. in Bd. 1 den Artikel „Emanzipatorisch“ von Karl-Heinz Hucke u. Olaf Kutzmutz, S. 434–443, hier S. 434: „Dieser Begriffswandel [von Emanzipation] ist entscheidend geworden für die Rede von einer emanzipatorischen Literatur in den 1970er Jahren, für die die Methodenkritik der Germanistik von Gansberg/Völker richtungsweisend war.“
  7. ^ Referat von Marie Luise Gansberg, Gießen. Veranstaltung in der Paulus-Akademie Zürich, Ausschreibung Paulus-Akademie.