Marie Luise Kaschnitz Prize

The Marie Luise Kaschnitz Prize (Marie-Luise-Kaschnitz-Preis) is a German literary prize, awarded approximately every two years by the Tutzing Protestant Academy Evangelische Akademie Tutzing. It recognizes the lifetime achievements of writers in the German language. The monetary value is €7,500.

The prize commemorates Marie Luise Kaschnitz, who died in 1974. The first award was announced on 14 October 1984.

Recipients

All the recipients except Aichinger and Fries are currently still alive.

gollark: Over long enough timescales it's possible. Nothing else works because all power things ever require scarce input.
gollark: Just get more?
gollark: Nuclear fission will certainly not work *literally forever* or even millions of years, but it doesn't have to.
gollark: If I say my reactor is made of 2 tonnes of uranium it's preloaded with, how is that better than that being supplied as fuel?
gollark: The relevant metric is scarce inputs per joule, or something.
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