Christa Wolf (born March 18, 1929 in Landsberg an der Warthe, Germany, as Christa Ihlenfeld) is one of the best-known writers to emerge from the former East Germany. She is a literary critic, novelist, and essayist.
In 1945 Wolf and her family were expelled from her home across the new border and they settled in Mecklenburg, in what would become East Germany. She joined the Socialist Unity Party of Germany in 1949. She studied literature at Jena and Leipzig. After her graduation she worked for the German Writers' Union and became an editor for a publishing company. Stasi records found in 1993 seemed to show that she had briefly worked as an informant (Inoffizieller Mitarbeiter ) in the 1950s.
Wolf's breakthrough as a writer came in 1963 with the publishing of Divided Heaven. Other subsequent works include The Quest for Christa T. (1968), Patterns of Childhood (1976), Cassandra (1983), and On the Way to Taboo (1994). What Remains, describing her life under Stasi surveillance, was written in 1979, but not published until 1990. Christa Wolf received the Heinrich Mann Prize in 1963, the Georg Büchner Prize in 1980, and the Schiller Memorial Prize in 1983, as well as other national and international awards.
During the era of the DDR, Wolf was openly critical of the leadership of East Germany, yet she maintained a loyalty to the values of Marx and opposed German reunification.
She lives in Berlin with her husband, Gerhard Wolf.
She is not related to Stasi spymaster Markus Wolf
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Last updated: 10-21-2005 01:30:51