Hedda Zinner
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hedda Zinner, or Hedda Erpenbeck-Zinner (20 May 1905-7 January 1994) was a German political writer.
[edit] Biography
Born in Lemberg, Zinner began working as an actress but her interest in the workers' movement led her to move to Berlin and, in 1929, join the Communist Party. She became a journalist for left-wing journals. When Hitler came to power, she moved to Vienna and then Prague, where she founded the cabaret Studio 34 in 1934. In 1935 she emigrated to Moscow. After the second world war she settled in East Berlin.
She also wrote under the pseudonym Elisabeth Frank.
[edit] Works
- Nur eine Frau [Only a Woman] (1954). A novel about the life of Louise Otto-Peters.
- Ahnen und Erben [Ancestors and Inheritors] (1968). Vol. 1 of her autobiography.
- Die Schwestern [Sisters] (1970). Vol. 2 of her autobiography.
See Bloomsbury Guide to Women's Literature