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Iris Hanika (born 1962) is a German writer.[1] She was born in Würzburg, grew up in Bad Königshofen and has lived in Berlin since 1979, where she studied Universal and Comparative Literature at the FU Berlin.[2][3][4] She was a regular contributor to German periodicals like Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (freelancer of the Berliner Seiten) and Merkur (2000–2008: column Chronicles). Hanika won the LiteraTour Nord prize and the EU Prize for Literature for her novel Das Eigentliche (The Bottom Line). In 2020, she was awarded the Hermann-Hesse-Literaturpreis for her novel Echos Kammern. In 2021, she won the Leipzig Book Fair Prize.[5] Hanika wrote previously mainly short non-fictional texts, later novels, including two books on psychoanalysis.[6]
——; Seifert, Edith (2006). Die Wette auf das Unbewusste, oder, Was Sie schon immer über Psychoanalyse wissen wollten (in German). Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp. ISBN3-518-12457-9. OCLC70132355.
Hanika, Iris; Hamann, Christof; Seebald, Christian; Bittner, Klaus (2022). Iris Hanika (in German). Köln: Institut für deutsche Sprache und Literatur I der Universität Köln. ISBN978-3-926397-55-3. OCLC1317832437.
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