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Hermann Hesse was born into a family of Pietist missionaries and religious publishers in the Black Forest town of Calw, in the German state of Wüttenberg on July 2, 1877. His parents expected him to follow the family tradition in theology. Hesse entered the Protestant seminary at Maulbronn in 1891, but he was expelled from the school. After unhappy experiences at a secular school, Hesse worked in several jobs.
In 1899 Hesse published his first works, Romantische Lieder and Eine Stunde Hinter Mitternacht. Hesse became a freelance writer in 1904, when his novel Peter Camenzind gained literary success. The book reflected Hesse's disgust with the educational system. In the same year he married Maria Bernoulli, with whom he had three children. A visit to India in 1911 interested Hesse in studies of Eastern religions and culminated in the novel Siddhartha (1922). It was based on the early life of Gautama Buddha. The culture of the ancient Hindus and the ancient Chinese had a great influence on Hesse's works.
In 1912 Hesse and his family took a permanent residence in Switzerland. In the novel Rosshalde (1914) Hesse explored the question of whether the artist should marry. The author's reply was negative. During these years his wife suffered from growing mental instability and his son was seriously ill. Hesse spent the years of World War I in Switzerland, attacking the prevailing moods of militarism and nationalism. Hesse's breakthrough novel was Demian (1919). It was a Faustian tale of a man torn between his orderly bourgeois existence and a chaotic world of sensuality.
Leaving his family in 1919, Hesse moved to Montagnola, in southern Switzerland. In 1922 appeared Siddhartha, a novel of asceticism set in the time of Buddha. Its English translation in the 1950s became a spiritual guide to the generation of American Beat poets. Hesse's second marriage to Ruth Wenger (1924-27) was unhappy. These difficult years produced Der Steppenwolf(1927). During the Weimar Republic (1919-1933) Hesse stayed aloof from politics.
In 1931 Hesse married his third wife, Ninon Dolbin, and began in the same year work on his masterpiece Das Glasperlenspiel, which was published in 1943. In 1942 Hesse sent the manuscript to Berlin for publication. It was not accepted by the Nazis and the work appeared for the first time in Zürich. . Hesse's other central works include In Sight of Chaos (1923), a collection of essays, the novel Narcissus and Goldmund (1930) and Poems (1970).
After receiving the Nobel Prize Hesse wrote no major works. He died of cerebral hemorrhage in his sleep on August 9, 1962 at the age of eighty-five. He is still one of the best-selling German writers throughout the world.
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steppenwolf
has anyone read this? i picked it up yesterday and bought it based on the authors intro. if you've read it, what were your thoughts?
Posted By limajean at Sun 10 Jan 2010, 11:47 PM in Hesse, Hermann || 16 Replies
Rebel theme in H. Hesses "Steppenwolf"
I'm working on my subject to the oral matura(sth like british A-Levels) exam. I have a subject about which a have to make a speech. Mine is: "Theme of a rebelious hero in literature". Apart from books from classics of polish literature I'm seeking for sth from modern written word. Sb told me that "Steppenwolf" will fit in my subject, but the problem is that I didn't read that book. Could sb who read it tell me is there any rebel motive in that book, and is it significant(I mean: Could I really say sth about it?). From reviews I can only see that the main problem of that novel is seeking one's identity in modern world, partly by rebel, true, but it seems not the (one of) main point. Thanks in advance for help:).
Posted By Gh. at Wed 14 Jan 2009, 8:50 AM in Hesse, Hermann || 1 Reply
Youth, Beautiful Youth
I have just finnished this story, and I thought it was fabulous. The prose of Hesse is so elegant, and flowing, and I always feel as if his writing speaks to me in someway. This was a beautiful story about a young man who upon returning home for the first time after setting off for himself, as a moment in which he sort of gets to relive his childhood again, as well as create some new experinces for himself. He is upon that very brink of age where his youth is starting to flee, and so he has one last moment to glorify in it, before it abandons him completely. The ending of the story is a touch bittersweet in nature, but it does end upon a hopeful note fringed with sadness.
Posted By Dark Muse at Sun 27 Jul 2008, 3:58 PM in Hesse, Hermann || 3 Replies
Which Hesse Short Story?
Some time ago I read a short story by Herman Hesse about a new mother who has one wish for her child. She wishes that her child be loved. Through the course of that child's life he comes to realize that it is better to love than to be loved. I cannot remember the name of this story. I read it in a collection of short stories by Herman Hesse. Does anyone know the title? Thanks.
Posted By Brindi at Sat 19 Jul 2008, 1:40 AM in Hesse, Hermann || 4 Replies
HELP!!...siddartha-herman hesse-symblos
hey guys i got a MASSIVE essay on the book siddartha by herman hesse i have my topic, "the importance to the overall journey of siddartha's spritual quest of the following symbols- the bird, the snake and the river" also*** logical reasoning would help me, i really need a good mark and i am stuck haha any ideas would be appreciated thanks
Posted By Clayton5 at Sun 23 Mar 2008, 3:29 PM in Hesse, Hermann || 2 Replies
Why does Haller kill Hermine?
I've just re-read Hesse's Steppenwolf. The first reading, 10 years ago, was a struggle. This time round I was transfixed. The whole novel abounded with significance for me. I am left with many thoughts and questions, but would appreciate anyone's take on why Haller kills Hermine. Very shortly after their first meeting Hermine alludes to the fact that Haller will eventually kill her. She says, it will be her last request of him, and that he will comply. When the moment finally comes, Haller finds her and Pablo naked and asleep in one of the rooms at the magic theatre. He stabbs her in her sleep (I cannot see where she requested he kill her). Pablo later critises Haller for having sullied the magic theatre with reality and says he hopes that Haller's motive for killing Hermine was jealousy. Now, the boundaries between reality and fantasy are blurred throughout the novel. Hence, the Hermine character may never have existed independently but only in Haller's imagination. In fact, there are strong indications that Hermine exists only as a part of Haller's personality, which he attempts to de-construct in the final pages of the book. Is the killing, then, an act of immaturity? The act of a man who feels he has no choice, but to act according to his conditioning? I don't know.
Posted By karo at Fri 21 Mar 2008, 10:33 AM in Hesse, Hermann || 5 Replies
What can be said about love in Hesse's works?
I have just finished reading Narcissus and Goldmund and Siddhartha and noice a parallel between the two in their theme of love, and the need for love. What specific connections can be made between these two novels, or about Hesse? Any thoughts in general on the topic of Hermann Hesse and love?
Posted By caroline567@msn at Sun 6 Jan 2008, 1:14 PM in Hesse, Hermann || 2 Replies
symbolism in demian
just read the book this past day. beautifully haunting. like a rythmic tune which ends with a deep resonating chord or a great fire burning down to its hot embers which burns for hours into ashes. when i finished i had one hell of a smile on my face. what do you think about all the symbolism in this book? Based on CG Jungs archetypal ideas right? But what did it mean to you?
Posted By libernaut at Mon 23 Jul 2007, 12:49 AM in Hesse, Hermann || 5 Replies
the league !!
The league mentioned in the header refers to these misfortunate individuals who were destined to know better and to feel more but at the same time they have an extreme level of "awareness", which is usually referred to as " God" by the mass. These individuals, which Herman Hesse was one of them, cannot help to see deeper and further when they look, so they usually are outcasts as far as society is concerned, and they must hence suffer more, so as was written by Hesse the steppen wolf was as outcast as knulp and finally yoseph Kencht. They have all belonged to the league as they can all skip the crust of things and people and then they relate all things together in a game which Hesse chose to call the glass bead game. that is the game of signs pointing to all similarities that lurks inside different objects and arts and sciences, these relationships can be compared to the bonds- electrical and magntic- which exist between micro and macro substances, an example would be the internal structure of a crystal and the group of mathematical formula that describes the crystal themselves. Members of this leage are existents who live now or lived before, and my guess is some of you can identify some of them,
Posted By seatopper at Thu 31 May 2007, 11:18 AM in Hesse, Hermann || 0 Replies
Poem 'Lebensstufen'
Hi, I am looking for a good translation of this poem into English. Can anyone help? Or direct me to a book that contains it in English?
Posted By marionbrandis at Wed 25 Apr 2007, 10:37 PM in Hesse, Hermann || 0 Replies