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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hermann_BahrHermann Bahr - Wikipedia

    Hermann Anastas Bahr ( German pronunciation: [ˈhɛʁman ˈbaːɐ̯]; 19 July 1863 – 15 January 1934) was an Austrian writer, playwright, director, and critic. Biography. Born and raised in Linz, [1] Bahr studied in Vienna, Graz, Czernowitz and Berlin, devoting special attention to philosophy, political economy, philology and law.

  2. Jul 19, 1998 · Hermann Bahr (born July 19, 1863, Linz, Upper Austria—died Jan. 15, 1934, Munich) was an Austrian author and playwright who championed (successively) naturalism, Romanticism, and Symbolism. After studying at Austrian and German universities, he settled in Vienna, where he worked on a number of newspapers.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Hermann Anastas Bahr (* 19. Juli 1863 in Linz, Kaisertum Österreich; † 15. Januar 1934 in München) war ein österreichischer Schriftsteller, Dramatiker sowie Theater - und Literaturkritiker. Er gilt als geistreicher Wortführer bürgerlich-literarischer Strömungen vom Naturalismus über die Wiener Moderne bis hin zum Expressionismus. [1]

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  5. Jan 6, 2015 · Hermann Bahr (1863-1934) Profession: Critic, writer, playwright. Residences: Vienna, Berlin. Relation to Mahler: Correspondence with Mahler: Address 1902: XIII, Veitlissengasse 5a, Vienna, Austria. Born: 19-07-1863, Linz, Austria. Died: 15-01-1934, Munich, Germany. Buried: Kommunalfriedhof, Salzburg, Austria.

  6. The friendship of Hermann Bahr (1863-1934) and Gustav. Klimt (1862-1918) was rooted in the common cause they shared the 1890 s of modernizing art in Vienna along the model of leading European nations in order thereby to help usher. culturally into the twentieth century.

  7. By Ifkovits, Kurt. Article. Hermann Barr was an Austrian author, essayist, critic, editor, dramaturg, and director. His wide-ranging career spanned most of the fin de siècle ’s major literary trends, such as naturalism, décadence, late Heimatkunst, and expressionism.

  8. Hermann Bahr (hĕr´män bär), 1863–1934, Austrian dramatist and critic. His essay Zur Kritik der Moderne (1890) established modernism as a literary term, and his study Expressionismus (1916, tr. 1925) defined that literary trend.

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