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・ Wolfgang Webner
・ Wolfgang Wegener
・ Wolfgang Wehrum
・ Wolfgang Weichardt
・ Wolfgang Weichselbaumer
・ Wolfgang Weil
・ Wolfgang Weingart
・ Wolfgang Weisbrod-Weber
・ Wolfgang Weise
・ Wolfgang Wendland
・ Wolfgang Wenzel
・ Wolfgang Wenzel von Haffner
・ Wolfgang Werlé and Manfred Lauber
・ Wolfgang Wesemann
・ Wolfgang West
Wolfgang Weyrauch
・ Wolfgang Weyrauch Prize
・ Wolfgang Wickler
・ Wolfgang Wiegard
・ Wolfgang Wienand
・ Wolfgang Wild
・ Wolfgang Wilhelm
・ Wolfgang Wilhelm (writer)
・ Wolfgang Wilhelm, Count Palatine of Neuburg
・ Wolfgang William Romer
・ Wolfgang Windgassen
・ Wolfgang Winkler
・ Wolfgang Wodarg
・ Wolfgang Wolf
・ Wolfgang Wosolsobe


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Wolfgang Weyrauch : ウィキペディア英語版
Wolfgang Weyrauch
Wolfgang Weyrauch (October 15, 1904 – November 7, 1980) was a German writer, journalist and actor. He wrote under the pseudonym Joseph Scherer.
== Life and work ==
Wolfgang Weyrauch was born Königsberg, Prussia as the son of a surveyor. After attending gymnasium and receiving his Abitur, he began going to acting school in Frankfurt am Main in 1924. Between 1925 and 1927, he acted in theaters in Münster, Bochum and at the Harztheater in Thale. From 1927 to 1929, Weyrauch pursued history, German studies and Romance studies at Goethe University Frankfurt.
In 1929, he began working as a freelance writer, from 1929 to 1933 at the ''Frankfurter Zeitung'', from 1932 to 1938 at the ''Berliner Tageblatt'' and from 1933 to 1934, at the ''Vossische Zeitung''. In the 1930s, Weyrauch also began to write radio plays, a newly emerged art form. During the 1930s, Weyrauch also worked as a literary editor and published his first books. From 1940 to 1945, he worked in an air intelligence unit in World War II. In 1945, he was held in a Soviet prisoner of war camp, and was released in the same year.
After 1945, Weyrauch wrote radio plays and narratives, and published numerous anthologies (see list below). From December 1945 to 1948, Weyrauch was editor of ''Ulenspiegel'', a satirical magazine〔(Darmstadt ), Literaturland Hessen, HR2 Kultur, Hessischer Rundfunk 〕〔"Weyrauch, Wolfgang," Jean Albert Bédé and William Benbow Edgerton, eds., ''Columbia Dictionary of Modern European Literature'', New York: Columbia University, 1980, ISBN 978-0-231-03717-4, (p. 870 )〕 and ''Ost und West'', both published in Berlin. He shaped the direction of "Kahlschlagliteratur" in ''Tausend Gramm'', a 1949 anthology edited by him, characterizing and promoting the rebirth of German literature after the end of the Third Reich. From 1950 to 1958, he was a literary editor at the Hamburg publisher, Rowohlt Verlag. Beginning in 1959, he returned to freelance writing, first in Gauting, near Munich and in Darmstadt after 1967.
Weyrauch was a member of the West German P.E.N. and the German Writers' Union. In 1951, he began taking part in Gruppe 47 conferences and in 1967, he became a member of the Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung in Darmstadt, where he died.

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