Fredi Lerch
Alfred “Fredi” Lerch (born 10 April 1954 in Roggwil) is a Swiss social critic journalist and publicist.
From 1982 to 2001, Lerch was editor of the Swiss weekly newspaper Die Wochenzeitung (WOZ). At that time he published a “two-volume history of Bernese subculture between 1955 and 1970 under the title of Begerts letzte Lektion (1996) and Muellers Weg ins Paradies (2001)”.[1] From 2001 to 2006 he was a member of the Municipal “Literary Commission” (Literarische Kommission) of the City of Bern. Since 2002 he works as a freelance journalist and is member of a press office called “puncto” in Bern. From 2006 to 2008, he published, together with Erwin Marti, the collected works (Werkausgabe) of the Swiss writer Carl Albert Loosli. He is the founder of the nonconformism archive at the Swiss National Library.[2]
External links
- Fredi Lerch: Alternative cultural centres in German-speaking Switzerland: Byways to Freedom. In: Passages/Passagen: A Swiss Cultural Magazine, no. 33, Winter 2002, p. 15–18. Template:En icon
Notes
- ^ Short biography of Fredi Lerch at: Fredi Lerch: Alternative cultural centres in German-speaking Switzerland: Byways to Freedom. In: Passages/Passagen: A Swiss Cultural Magazine, no. 33, Winter 2002, p. 18 (translation by Maureen Oberli-Turner)
- ^ Nonkonformismus Archiv Fredi Lerch