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Viviana Finzi Vita

    Hermann Lauscher
    Klingsor's Last Summer
    • Klingsor's Last Summer

      • 217pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Written over the course of a few weeks in July and August 1919, it was published in December 1919 in the Deutsche Rundschau. It was later published (by Samuel Fischer) in a volume which included Kinderseele and Klein und Wagner. The story is an account of the final months of the life of Klingsor, a forty-two-year-old expressionist painter. A lover of poetry, a heavy drinker and a womanizer, he spends his final summer in southern Italy, torn between sensuality and spirituality and troubled by feelings of impending death.

      Klingsor's Last Summer1994
      3,7
    • Hermann Lauscher

      • 155pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Hermann Lauscher, written by Hesse at the age of twenty, can be seen as a form of "self-discovery." In the preface to its first edition, Hesse reflects on the mystery of the texts within Hermann Lauscher, noting that the name is introduced to the public for the first time. The writings of Lauscher, published under a foreign name, are well-known to a limited audience. Hesse laments that the author, who has since passed away, has forbidden him from revealing his secrets or claiming the writings published before his death. He expresses that "bitter understanding is better than ignorance," and those who embark on the perilous path of self-observation and confession must bear the consequences, however unexpected or sorrowful. Over the years, whenever Hesse revisits Lauscher, he encounters passages he wishes to discard or alter, such as youthful, arrogant, foolish remarks about Tolstoy at the beginning of the diary. Yet, he feels he has no right to distort his youthful portrait.

      Hermann Lauscher1993
      3,3