Difference between revisions of "Asja Lacis"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | '''Asja Lācis''' (Russian: Анна 'Ася' Эрнестовна Лацис, Anna 'Asya' Ernestovna Latsis; German: Asja Lazis; 19 October 1891 – 21 November 1979) was a Latvian actress and theatre director. | + | '''Asja Lācis''' (Latvian: Anna Lāce; Russian: Анна 'Ася' Эрнестовна Лацис, Anna 'Asya' Ernestovna Latsis; German: Asja Lazis; 19 October 1891 – 21 November 1979) was a Latvian actress and theatre director. |
− | + | ==Writings== | |
+ | * ''Revolutionäres Theater in Deutschland'', Moscow, 1935. | ||
* ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10674 Revolutionär im Beruf, Berichte über proletarisches Theater, über Meyerhold, Brecht, Benjamin und Piscator]'', ed. Hildegard Brenner, Munich: Rogner & Bernhard, 1971, 132 pp. Review: [[Media:Parmalee_Patty_Lee_1975_Asja_Lacis.pdf|Parmalee]] (NGC 1975 EN). {{de}} | * ''[http://monoskop.org/log/?p=10674 Revolutionär im Beruf, Berichte über proletarisches Theater, über Meyerhold, Brecht, Benjamin und Piscator]'', ed. Hildegard Brenner, Munich: Rogner & Bernhard, 1971, 132 pp. Review: [[Media:Parmalee_Patty_Lee_1975_Asja_Lacis.pdf|Parmalee]] (NGC 1975 EN). {{de}} | ||
− | * ''Krasnaia gvozdika. Vospominaniia'', Riga: Liesma, | + | * ''Die rote Nelke'', 1981. Autobiography. {{de}} |
+ | * ''Krasnaia gvozdika. Vospominaniia'' [Красная гвоздика: воспоминания], Riga: Liesma, 1984. Memoirs. {{ru}} | ||
− | + | ==Literature== | |
+ | * Heinz-Uwe Haus, "In memoriam Asja Lacis (19. Oktober 1891–21. November 1979)", in ''Brecht, Women and Politics'', eds. John Fuegi, Gisela Bahr, and John Willett, Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1985, pp 138-147. {{en}} | ||
* Dagmāra Ķimele, Gunta Strautmane, ''Asja: režisores Annas Lāces dēkainā dzīve'' [Asja: The Stormy Life of the director Anna Lāce], Riga: Likteņstāsti, 1996. {{lv}} | * Dagmāra Ķimele, Gunta Strautmane, ''Asja: režisores Annas Lāces dēkainā dzīve'' [Asja: The Stormy Life of the director Anna Lāce], Riga: Likteņstāsti, 1996. {{lv}} | ||
* Susan Ingram, [[Media:Ingram_Susan_2002_The_Writing_of_Asja_Lacis.pdf|"The Writing of Asja Lacis"]], ''New German Critique'' 86 (2002), pp 159-177. {{en}} | * Susan Ingram, [[Media:Ingram_Susan_2002_The_Writing_of_Asja_Lacis.pdf|"The Writing of Asja Lacis"]], ''New German Critique'' 86 (2002), pp 159-177. {{en}} | ||
* Susan Ingram, "Anja Lacis", ch 4 in Ingram, ''Zarathustra's Sisters: Women's Autobiography and the Shaping of Cultural History'', University of Toronto Press, 2002, pp 77-90. [http://books.google.com/books?id=fhC_lS40zSIC&pg=PA77] {{en}} | * Susan Ingram, "Anja Lacis", ch 4 in Ingram, ''Zarathustra's Sisters: Women's Autobiography and the Shaping of Cultural History'', University of Toronto Press, 2002, pp 77-90. [http://books.google.com/books?id=fhC_lS40zSIC&pg=PA77] {{en}} | ||
+ | * Beata Paskevica, ''In der Stadt der Parolen. Asja Lacis, Walter Benjamin und Bertolt Brecht'', Essen: Klartext, 2006, 336 pp. {{de}} | ||
* Sophie Pachner, [http://othes.univie.ac.at/2955/1/2008-12-01_0107140.pdf ''”Aber jeder bewahrte da seinen Namen“. Die Masse im Theater der zwanziger Jahre bei Asja Lacis und Bertolt Brecht''], Vienna: Universität Wien, 2008, 122 pp. Master's thesis. {{de}} | * Sophie Pachner, [http://othes.univie.ac.at/2955/1/2008-12-01_0107140.pdf ''”Aber jeder bewahrte da seinen Namen“. Die Masse im Theater der zwanziger Jahre bei Asja Lacis und Bertolt Brecht''], Vienna: Universität Wien, 2008, 122 pp. Master's thesis. {{de}} | ||
− | + | ==See also== | |
* [[Walter Benjamin]] | * [[Walter Benjamin]] | ||
− | + | ==Links== | |
+ | * http://www.scheinschlag.de/archiv/2001/09_2001/texte/28.html | ||
* http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asja_Lācis | * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asja_Lācis |
Revision as of 12:23, 2 January 2016
Asja Lācis (Latvian: Anna Lāce; Russian: Анна 'Ася' Эрнестовна Лацис, Anna 'Asya' Ernestovna Latsis; German: Asja Lazis; 19 October 1891 – 21 November 1979) was a Latvian actress and theatre director.
Contents
Writings
- Revolutionäres Theater in Deutschland, Moscow, 1935.
- Revolutionär im Beruf, Berichte über proletarisches Theater, über Meyerhold, Brecht, Benjamin und Piscator, ed. Hildegard Brenner, Munich: Rogner & Bernhard, 1971, 132 pp. Review: Parmalee (NGC 1975 EN). (German)
- Die rote Nelke, 1981. Autobiography. (German)
- Krasnaia gvozdika. Vospominaniia [Красная гвоздика: воспоминания], Riga: Liesma, 1984. Memoirs. (Russian)
Literature
- Heinz-Uwe Haus, "In memoriam Asja Lacis (19. Oktober 1891–21. November 1979)", in Brecht, Women and Politics, eds. John Fuegi, Gisela Bahr, and John Willett, Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1985, pp 138-147. (English)
- Dagmāra Ķimele, Gunta Strautmane, Asja: režisores Annas Lāces dēkainā dzīve [Asja: The Stormy Life of the director Anna Lāce], Riga: Likteņstāsti, 1996. (Latvian)
- Susan Ingram, "The Writing of Asja Lacis", New German Critique 86 (2002), pp 159-177. (English)
- Susan Ingram, "Anja Lacis", ch 4 in Ingram, Zarathustra's Sisters: Women's Autobiography and the Shaping of Cultural History, University of Toronto Press, 2002, pp 77-90. [1] (English)
- Beata Paskevica, In der Stadt der Parolen. Asja Lacis, Walter Benjamin und Bertolt Brecht, Essen: Klartext, 2006, 336 pp. (German)
- Sophie Pachner, ”Aber jeder bewahrte da seinen Namen“. Die Masse im Theater der zwanziger Jahre bei Asja Lacis und Bertolt Brecht, Vienna: Universität Wien, 2008, 122 pp. Master's thesis. (German)