Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Heinrich Mann and the Struggle for Democracy
- 2 Hermann Hesse and the Weimar Republic
- 3 In Defense of Reason and Justice: Lion Feuchtwanger's Historical Novels of the Weimar Republic
- 4 The Case of Jakob Wassermann: Social, Legal, and Personal Crises in the Weimar Republic
- 5 Signs of the Times: Joseph Roth's Weimar Journalism
- 6 Ernst Jünger, the New Nationalists, and the Memory of the First World War
- 7 Innocent Killing: Erich Maria Remarque and the Weimar Anti-War Novels
- 8 In “A Far-Off Land”: B. Traven
- 9 Weimar's Forgotten Cassandra: The Writings of Gabriele Tergit in the Weimar Republic
- 10 Radical Realism and Historical Fantasy: Alfred Döblin
- 11 Vicki Baum: “A First-Rate Second-Rate Writer”?
- 12 Hans Fallada's Literary Breakthrough: Bauern, Bonzen und Bomben and Kleiner Mann — was nun?
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
2 - Hermann Hesse and the Weimar Republic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Heinrich Mann and the Struggle for Democracy
- 2 Hermann Hesse and the Weimar Republic
- 3 In Defense of Reason and Justice: Lion Feuchtwanger's Historical Novels of the Weimar Republic
- 4 The Case of Jakob Wassermann: Social, Legal, and Personal Crises in the Weimar Republic
- 5 Signs of the Times: Joseph Roth's Weimar Journalism
- 6 Ernst Jünger, the New Nationalists, and the Memory of the First World War
- 7 Innocent Killing: Erich Maria Remarque and the Weimar Anti-War Novels
- 8 In “A Far-Off Land”: B. Traven
- 9 Weimar's Forgotten Cassandra: The Writings of Gabriele Tergit in the Weimar Republic
- 10 Radical Realism and Historical Fantasy: Alfred Döblin
- 11 Vicki Baum: “A First-Rate Second-Rate Writer”?
- 12 Hans Fallada's Literary Breakthrough: Bauern, Bonzen und Bomben and Kleiner Mann — was nun?
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Ashort poem entitled “November 1914” presents us with the quietness of a forest, in which mist hangs and leaves fall; a storm then tears through the forest, clearing away the mist and stripping the trees of branches and leaves. The final stanza cries:
Räum auf und brich in Scherben,
Was nimmer halten mag,
Und reiß aus Nacht und Sterben
Empor den lichten Tag!
[Clear up and break into pieces
What can never last,
And bring out of night and death
The light of day!]
Like many poems of the Expressionist period, this text — written by a pacifist — welcomes the outbreak of the First World War as an opportunity to clear away the dead wood of a stagnant society. Although the mood of later poems changed as the war went on, for the most part they retain an element of optimism. “Im Frühling 1915” (In Spring 1915), for example, opens with a vision of Christ, who has come down from his cross to preach the kingdom of love; in the second stanza he wanders across a dark field of blood; in the final stanza, however, new flowers blossom on the meadow, and birdsong fills the air (G, 404). In “Im vierten Kriegsjahr” (In the Fourth Year of War), written in April 1917, the evening is cold and sad, and it is raining; but even if the world is drowning in war and fear, love still burns somewhere (G, 423).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- German Novelists of the Weimar RepublicIntersections of Literature and Politics, pp. 45 - 60Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2006