Armin Steigenberger

Armin Steigenberger (born 7 January 1965 in Nuremberg) is a German poet, novelist, writer, literary editor, and musician.[1] At the end of the 1990s, he was chairman of the Münchner Literaturbüro.[2] He won several literary awards including Irseer Pegasus in 2009.

Armin Steigenberger
Steigenberger at Chittagong, Bangladesh in 2017
Born (1965-01-07) 7 January 1965
Nuremberg, Germany
NationalityGermany
Occupation
  • Poet
  • writer
  • editor
Years active2002present
Spouse(s)
Christel Steigenberger (m. 2000)

Life and work

Armin Steigenberger studied architecture at Technical University of Munich and worked until 2000 in this profession. Since then he has worked as a freelance writer writing reviews and organizing reading and writing seminars. In addition, he moderates two radio broadcasts for LORA Munich and is co-editor of the literary magazine Ausser.dem.[3] He is a member of the poetry group Rhyme Free[4] and was from 2008 to 2011 participant in the Darmstadt Text Workshop Kurt Drawert. Together with Karin Fellner, he is considered one of the driving forces in the development of a contemporary Munich lyric poetry scene.[5] Armin Steigenberger mainly writes poetry, but also published a novel and wrote plays. Numerous texts also appeared in literary journals (e.g. Das Gedicht, lauter niemand, NDL, Ostragehege) and anthologies (e.g. Versnetze).

Steigenberger moderated the one-hour radio program "Beautiful Stuttering", from 2007 to 2015, together with Enrico Strathausen. The program offered information on stuttering, but above all on the social perception of stuttering and the associated exclusion.[6] The program was perceived as a successful attempt to counteract social discrimination against stuttering people. The fact that both moderators themselves stuttered was a peculiarity and was considered a taboo because stuttering people would not normally have access to the radio and television media.[7]

Armin Steigenberger is married and lives in Munich.

Single title

In 2017, Steigenberger playing guitar at Bistaar, an art complex in Chittagong.
  • Fleck, novel, Gangan Verlag, E-Book, Graz/Sydney 2002 ISBN 978-3-900530-36-5
  • gebrauchsanweisung für ein vaterland (Instructions for Use for A Fatherland), poems, Pop Verlag Ludwigsburg, 2006 ISBN 3-937139-21-4
  • die fortsetzung des glücks mit anderen mitteln (The Continuation of Happiness With Other Means), with Mathias Jeschke, poems, Horlemann Verlag Berlin, 2014 ISBN 978-3-89502-365-1[8][9]
  • Planspiel (Business Game), play, 2006.

Awards

  • 2006 in the last selection round of the 3rd Drama Competition of the Alexander S. Onassis Foundation with the play Planspiel (Business Game)
  • 2006 3rd Prize at dO!PEN Award
  • 2009 1st prize at the 11th Irseer Pegasus
  • 2013 2nd prize in the literature competition Stockstadt.
  • 2015 Special Prize at the Book Fair in Ried, Stockstadt.

References

  1. "Armin Steigenberger auf Literaturport" (in German). Literaturport.de. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  2. "Armin Steigenberger – der (Nicht-)Satiriker*". signaturen. signaturen. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
  3. "Interview mit Armin Steigenberger zur Literaturzeitschrift außer.dem". Archived from the original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  4. Reimfrei
  5. Jetzt Magazin der Süddeutschen Zeitung
  6. Website Schöner Stottern. Abgerufen am 13. Juli 2017
  7. Perlentaucher TV/Radio-, Film- + Musik-News + TV-Kritik vom 25. Oktober 2011. Abgerufen am 13. Juli 2017
  8. Dombrowski, Dominik (2014). "Wilde Musiken – „die fortsetzung des glücks mit anderen mitteln" – Neue Lyrik von Armin Steigenberger". Signaturen (in German). Retrieved 26 February 2020.
  9. Astrid Nischkauer (19 July 2014). "rückwärtsdichten mit Armin Steigenberger" (in German). Fixpoetry. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
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