Helga Schubert

Helga Schubert (Pseudonym for Helga Helm, born 7 January 1940 in Berlin) is a German Psychologist and author.[1]

Life

Helga Shubert is a daughter of a librarian, who was also active in economics, and of a 1941 favored Gerichtsassessor and grew up in East Berlin. She took her Reifeprüfung (secondary school examination) and worked afterwards a year in a Berlin industrial plant on the assembly line. From 1958 to 1963, she studied psychology at the Humboldt University and acquired the degree of a diploma in psychology. From 1963 to 1977, she was in the main profession and from 1977 through 1987 in a second occupation as an active clinical psychologist: until 1973, she worked in adult psychotherapy. Then from 1973 to 1977, she was active scientifically at the Humboldt University with the aim of a Doctorate. She did not attain the doctorate. From 1977 until 1987 she contributed to the teachings of Gesprächstherapeuten (psycho therapy with a focus on speech) and at a marriage advice center in Berlin. Since 1977, she is an author. From December 1989 until March 1990, she was a neutral spokesperson of the Central Round Table in East Berlin. The author lives today together with painter and leading clinical psychologist Johannes Helm in Neu Meteln in Schwerin - also known as Künstlerkolonie Drispeth (Artist Colony Drispeth).

Helga Schubert, who began preparations in the sixties with the writing, published in the DDR beside a series of children's literature prose text, in which would be portrayed from unusual stylistic precise stylish art sale from the East German everyday life. Beside it, Schubert wrote Theater Dramas, Radio Dramas, Television Plays and Movie Scenes. After die Wende, she would be known through her documentary work "Judasfrauen" which dealt with the theme "Denunciation in the Third Reich" from the foundations of file study.

Helga Schubert, who has belonged to Schriftstellerverband der DDR (Writer's Union of East Germany) since 1976 and the P.E.N.-Central of East Germany since 1987 though moved to the P.E.N.-Central of Germany in 1991, received among others the following awards: 1982 Script Prize at the second National Film Festival of the DDR for Die Beunruhigung (The Worry), 1983 Heinrich Greif Prize, 1986 Heinrich Mann Prize, 1991 Honorary Doctorate - Doctor of Humane Letters from Purdue University and 1993 Hans Fallada Prize.

Works

Literature

References

  1. Dueck, Cheryl (2004). Rifts in time and in the self: the female subject in two generations of East German women writers. Rodopi. pp. 79–. ISBN 978-90-420-0937-0. Retrieved 27 June 2011.

External links

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