Jump to content

Gruppe Olten

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 208.19.15.207 (talk) at 06:58, 6 March 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Hey Tony, Hey Tony I'm sorry for all the things I've done to you to slander you're name on Wikipedia. I won't do it again. I hope soon we can be friends. You and Roland Rance, let's be friends and walk into the sunset. - You Know Who, sorry and friendly now

The Gruppe Olten (Olten Group) was a club of Swiss writers who convened at Olten's “Bahnhofbuffet“ (Swiss expression for a railway station restaurant) located in the canton of Solothurn in the Swiss plateau. It was founded in the aforementioned railway station restaurant and existed from 1970 to 2002.

The group counted 22 famous former members of the Swiss writer’s club (Schweizerischer Schriftstellerverein, or SSV). Big names like Max Frisch, Adolf Muschg, Peter Bichsel and Friedrich Dürrenmatt had left the SSV (which was considered to be unprogressive) and became members of the Gruppe Olten.

One of the reasons that led to the separation was that the SSV president Maurice Zermatten had translated into French the official anti-communist “Civil Defense Book”, which commanded citizens to observe and distrust each other and that was distributed among all Swiss households during the Cold War.

For the founding members of the group, writing was inseparably associated with political commitment. They specified the goal to “build a democratic-socialist society” in their bylaws. That goal was discarded in 2000, causing the departure of Mariella Mehr. The remaining part of the article read: "It [the Olten Group] supports nationwide and international political attempts that involve the fair distribution of goods, democratizing economy and public institutions, saving the world from military and civil destruction, and the realization of human rights.

On 12 October 2002 the Olten Group disbanded in Bern, as did the Swiss writer’s club SSV (in the meantime renamed "Schweizerischer Schriftstellerinnen- und Schriftstellerverband"). A new club, named "Authors of Switzerland" (Autorinnen und Autoren der Schweiz), was founded in their stead.