Heinrich Böll is one of the most important and best-known writers of the Federal Republic of Germany. "Bound by the times and my contemporaries, to what my generation has lived through, experienced, seen, and heard," as he himself wrote, he was the critical chronicler of Germany’s history at mid-century.
The Heinrich Böll house at Langenbroich, a former residence of the Böll family, offers workspace for artists who are unable to work creativly - be it for reasons of censorship, civil unrest, or because of their economic situation.
The Heinrich Böll House Langenbroich offers four flats for writers and artists: two single apartments, one double and one treble. The working grants are not primarily linked to specific projects - the important thing is to create the right conditions for a good working atmosphere.
Heinrich Böll passed away on the 16 July 1985. Since that time much that was part and parcel of the environment in which the Nobel laureate lived and worked have undergone fundamental change. However, the quality that makes Böll’s work transcend contemporary factors and lends it enduring significance was something at the centre of his narrative and essayistic works – namely, the aspiration to act autonomously and develop forms of free, personal commitment that go beyond conventional patterns of thought. Böll viewed freedom, above all, as freedom of the mind.
The following texts and documents commemorate the life and work of a great artist and intellectual whose novels, stories, and political interventions retain great currency because of their very distinct character.
Heinrich Böll
Biography
1917- 1937: Between two wars - childhood and adolescence
1938 - 1945: "When the War Broke Out" and "When the War was Over"
1945 - 1952: Beginnings of a literary career
1953 – 1959 A Recognised Writer
1960 - 1969: Art and commitment
1970 - 1980: The meddlesome Nobel laureate
1981 - 1985: The aesthetics of resistence
The Heinrich Böll House
The Heinrich Böll House Langenbroich
Heinrich Böll House Langenbroich: Grant Awards
Heinrich Böll
Heinrich Böll passed away on the 16 July 1985. Since that time much that was part and parcel of the environment in which the Nobel laureate lived and worked have undergone fundamental change. However, the quality that makes Böll’s work transcend contemporary factors and lends it enduring significance was something at the centre of his narrative and essayistic works – namely, the aspiration to act autonomously and develop forms of free, personal commitment that go beyond conventional patterns of thought. Böll viewed freedom, above all, as freedom of the mind.
The following texts and documents commemorate the life and work of a great artist and intellectual whose novels, stories, and political interventions retain great currency because of their very distinct character.