Sibylle Berg

Brainfuck, a science fiction novel set in a dystopian near future[3][4] won the Swiss Book Prize and was noticed by The Washington Post.

[6] On 1 March 2023 Berg was invited as special guest to open the high-profile Elevate Festival in Graz, Austria.

[24] In 2008, the play Von denen die überleben (Of Those Who Survive) was staged in the central theater of Zürich, in collaboration with well-known artists such as Jon Pylypchuk,[25] Gabríela Friðriksdóttir,[26] and more.

[32] Berg's plays have been staged and aired in the United States, Britain, Italy, France, Spain, Poland, Lithuania, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Hungary, Turkey, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands, Romania, and Bulgaria.

[37] They support the Charter of Digital Fundamental Rights of the European Union, published at the end of November 2016,[38] and is a regular guest at the Re:publica conference.

[40] Berg also conducts a regular interview series for the Swiss online magazine Republik, entitled "Nerds Save The World", in which they speak to specialists from various disciplines.

Along with Rammstein and Element of Crime, Phillip Boa and the Voodooclub can be heard on the recorded reading of Berg's novel Sex II (1999).

From January 2016 to December 2017, Berg read their own satirical texts off-air ahead of the introduction of guests on the ZDFneo talk show Schulz & Böhmermann.

[44] In March 2013, Berg co-directed, with Hasko Weber, Angst Reist Mit (Fear Travels With Us) at the Stuttgart Theater.

That same year, The Berliner Festspiele honored them in "A Day with Sibylle Berg", where they directed a day-long event (including 60 well-known artists, some personal friends, others collaborators).

[46] In 2018, Berg collaborated with Simone Meier, Hedwig Richter, Margarete Stokowski, and seven others to produce the list "Women You Need to Know", published in August by Spiegel Online and Watson.ch.

The canon includes 145 women and three female artist groups, sub-divided into science, technology, research, as well as politics, literature, and art.