Dorothea Herzog

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Dorothea Herzog (born February 23, 1932) is a German pedagogue and poet who is well known in the underground culture for her work. She is recipient of the CV Poetry Prize.[citation needed]

[edit] Early years and family

She was born in Ravensburg in the German state of Baden Württemberg to a middle-class family who supported the nationalistic party NSDAP. Her father, Friedrich Ernst Herzog, was an artillery officer who fought at the eastern front on the dark days of the Nazi regime. Her Mother, Wilhelmina Herzog, made her fortune selling handmade knives in Stuttgart. In her early years her learning was disrupted by her dyslexia. The physician Werner Weinberg has a theory, that Herzog suffers a rare form of trisomy 21, with mosaic appearance. Due to this rare form, the disease affects only her facial aspect. Dorothea Herzog, being her parents' only child had a happy infancy, but her teenage years were marked by the immense suffering of the war and the death of her parents. Some say that this strongly influenced her work.

[edit] Work

Herzog's poetry is influenced by dadaistic themes but also has elements of modern XXI Century poetry.