Senta Dinglreiter: Difference between revisions

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Her first travelogue was published in 1932, ''Deutsches Mädel fährt um die Welt'' ("German girl travels around the world"). After traveling to former German colonies in preparation for the book ''Wann kommen die Deutschen endlich wieder?'' ("When are the Germans finally coming back?"), which was published in 1935, she focused on writing pro-colonial literature. In 1938, she travelled to [[New Guinea]], which served as an inspiration for her book ''So sah ich unsere Südsee'' ("This is how I saw our South Sea").<ref name=":1" />
 
After [[World War II]], her books were included in a list on prohibited literature ("Liste der auszusondernden Literatur") by the occupation forces.<ref>{{Internetquelle|url=http://www.polunbi.de/bibliothek/1946-nslit-d.html|titel=Buchstabe D, Liste der auszusondernden Literatur. Herausgegeben von der Deutschen Verwaltung für Volksbildung in der sowjetischen Besatzungszone. Vorläufige Ausgabe nach dem Stand vom 1. April 1946 (Berlin: Zentralverlag, 1946).|abruf=2024-08-12}}</ref> In the war1950s, she keptresumed publishing travel reports, but also especially novels in the [[Heimatroman]] genre depicting farm life in rural Bavaria. She died in 1969 in [[Munich air disaster|Munich]]. Her urn was transferred to a cemetery in her home municipality Fürstenzell on the 40th anniversary of her death. Fürstenzell named a street after her.
 
== Themes ==