Maria Carlsson

Maria Carlsson-Augstein (born 1937) is a former German female literary translator. She was fluent in English and has translated numerous English literary works in German language.

Biography

Maria Carlsson was born in 1937. She was married to German journalist Hans-Joachim Sperr. After Sperr's death, she married Rudolf Augstein in 1968. They had two children, Franziska Augstein and Jakob Augstein. They got divorced in 1970. Following her ex-husband's death in 2002, she informed her son that his biological father was in fact novelist Martin Walser.[1]

Literature career

Carlsson has been working as a translator of literary works which are derived from the English language since the 1950s, and has translated numerous John Updike popular literary works such as Memories of the time under Ford, The Party in the evening, I never was happy, Golf dreams.[2][3]

In 1994, she was awarded the Heinrich Maria Ledig-Rowohit Prize and in 2002 she received Helmut M. Braem Translator Prize for her outstanding translations of the literary works from English to German language.

gollark: The specific bizarre way it's arranged gives tons of power to a bunch of arbitrary regions, especially ones which are likely to vote either way.
gollark: Anyway, thing is, the electoral college is not actually a very good mechanism for giving rural areas more power, that just works as a pretext for it.
gollark: But not split proportionally *by area* or something.
gollark: It might make more sense split proportionally and not winner-takes-all, which I'm pretty sure is the case now.
gollark: That would be rebalancing it even more ridiculously arbitrarily.

References

  1. Gerrit Bartels: Augstein und Walser. Vater und Sohn: Eine gewisse Ähnlichkeit. In: Der Tagesspiegel. 28 November 2009. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  2. "Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek". portal.dnb.de (in German). Retrieved 2017-11-05.
  3. Snell-Hornby, Mary (1988-01-01). Translation Studies: An Integrated Approach. John Benjamins Publishing. ISBN 9027220565.
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