Karl May
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Karl Friedrich May | |
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Born | February 25, 1842 Ernstthal, Electorate of Saxony |
Died | March 30, 1912 (aged 70) Radebeul, Kingdom of Saxony |
Occupation | Writer; author |
Nationality | German |
Genres | Western |
Karl Friedrich May (February 25, 1842 – March 30, 1912) was one of the best selling German writers of all time, noted mainly for books set in the American Old West and similar books set in the Orient and Middle East; in addition, he also wrote stories set in his native Germany, in China and in South America. May also wrote poetry, and several plays. He also composed music, being proficient with several musical instruments. May's musical version of "Ave Maria" became very well known.
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[edit] Life and career
May was born into a family of poor weavers in Ernstthal, Kingdom of Saxony. According to his autobiography, he suffered from visual impairment and rickets shortly after birth, due to lack of vitamins A and D. He regained his eyesight after treatment at the age of four or five. May finished a Teacher's College and became a teacher in Waldenburg and Plauen. His brief career as a teacher ended abruptly during 1863 when he was accused by his apartment-mate of stealing a pocket watch, which May himself always denied. His licence to teach was revoked permanently and probably as a consequence he suffered a nervous breakdown. During the next several years he was accused of petty misdeeds whilst suffering from what is now diagnosed as Dissociative Identity Disorder, and was twice jailed for small thefts and alleged frauds.
During the years in prison May began writing. In 1875 his first known story was published. Not until 1892, when 'Winnetou I' appeared in a book edition, did he achieve success with his writing, eventually becoming very popular. Many of his books are written as first-person accounts by the narrator-protagonist, and he sometimes claimed that he actually experienced the events he described.
May used many different pseudonyms, including Capitan Ramon Diaz de la Escosura, M. Gisela, Hobble-Frank, Karl Hohenthal, D. Jam, Prinz Muhamel Lautréamont, Ernst von Linden, P. van der Löwen, Franz Langer, and Emma Pollmer (the actual name of his first wife: according to May, she was never aware of the purpose or content of his writing). Nowadays his works are all published under his own name.
He visited North America only in 1908, long after writing the novels set there, never travelling west of Buffalo, New York. He compensated successfully for this lack of direct experience of the Western milieu by an ingenious combination of creativity, imagination, and factual sources including maps, travel accounts and guide books, as well as anthropological and linguistic studies.
Non-dogmatic Christian feelings and values play an important role, and May's heroes are often described as being of German ancestry. In addition, following the Romantic ideal of the "noble savage", and inspired by the writings of James Fenimore Cooper, his Native Americans are generally portrayed as innocent victims of white law-breakers, and many are presented as heroic characters. In his later works, there is a strong element of mysticism.
For the novels set in America, May described the characters of Winnetou, the wise chief of the Apache Tribe, and Old Shatterhand, the author's alter ego and Winnetou's white blood brother. Another successful series of novels is set in the Ottoman Empire. Here the narrator-protagonist calls himself Kara Ben Nemsi, i.e., Karl, son of Germany, and travels with his local guide and servant Hadschi Halef Omar through the Sahara desert and the Near East, all the while experiencing many exciting adventures. Both series are linked not only by the common narrator, the author himself as either Old Shatterhand or Kara Ben Nemsi, but also by numerous other references and shared minor characters.
May's works were extremely successful, particularly in continental Europe, and have been translated into more than thirty different languages including Hebrew, Latin, Volapük, Esperanto, and Ido. More than 200 million copies of May's books have been sold worldwide. Recently his work has become popularized among English-speakers, mainly through the efforts of translators such as Marlies Bugmann from Tasmania, Australia, a widely known artist and writer of children's adventure books, who set as her goal to translate all of May's enormous literary output into the English language within five years; she already is close to finishing all the translations. Several of his novels were made during the 1960s into sixteen films, usually with the scenery of the former Yugoslavia doubling for the Wild West.
May's works had famous admirers, including Albert Einstein, Hermann Hesse, Heinrich Mann, Karl Liebknecht, and Bertha von Suttner. Carl Zuckmayer named his daughter after the character "Winnetou". For a long time, literary critics tended to regard May's literature as trivial. The Karl May Society (Karl-May-Gesellschaft) was founded in 1969 to commemorate his life and works.
May's house "Villa Shatterhand" in Radebeul near Dresden in Germany has been made a museum devoted to him and his collection of anthropological artifacts of native American Indian origin. It is also the home of "Karl May Foundation" publishing quarterly the "Beobachter an der Elbe" journal.
[edit] Filmed works
Between 1912 and 1968 German cinema produced 23 movies made after novels by May, most of them only associated vaguely with the stories of the respective novels. In thirteen of these movies American actor Lex Barker starred either as Old Shatterhand, Kara Ben Nemsi, or Doctor Sternau. Three movies have seen British actor Stewart Granger in the leading role as Old Surehand and one movie starred American actor Rod Cameron as Old Firehand. At the time of writing, May considered the prefix "Old" to the names of several of his heroes as illustrating the great experience of the heroes. Eleven movies featured French actor Pierre Brice as the fictional Apache chief "Winnetou".
The music for the movie Der Schatz im Silbersee (The Treasure of Silver Lake) (1962), composed by German Martin Böttcher, became well known. Music was one reason for the great success of the Karl May movies of the 1960s. The success of these movies made possible the later so called "Spaghetti Western" from Italy (with the famous compositions of Ennio Morricone). The star of some of the Spaghetti Westerns, Terence Hill, began his career in the German Karl May movies.
The 1960s Karl May films are typical popular productions of the time, and have not aged as well as the Italian westerns from the same time period. Most of them were shot in former Yugoslavia, some in Spain, none in America. May himself is the subject of a 1974 film by Hans-Jürgen Syberberg.
- Auf den Trümmern des Paradieses (1920), silent movie
- Die Todeskarawane (1920), silent movie
- Die Teufelsanbeter (1920), silent movie
- Durch die Wüste (1936), first May talkie
- Die Sklavenkarawane (1958), first May color film
- Der Löwe von Babylon (1959)
- Der Schatz im Silbersee (1962)
- Winnetou 1. Teil (1963)
- Old Shatterhand (1964)
- Der Schut (1964)
- Winnetou 2. Teil (1964)
- Unter Geiern (1964)
- Der Schatz der Azteken (1965)
- Die Pyramide des Sonnengottes (1965)
- Der Ölprinz (1965)
- Durchs wilde Kurdistan (1965)
- Winnetou 3. Teil (1965)
- Old Surehand 1. Teil (1965)
- Im Reiche des silbernen Löwen (1965)
- Das Vermächtnis des Inka (1965)
- Winnetou und das Halbblut Apanatschi (1966)
- Winnetou und sein Freund Old Firehand (1966)
- Winnetou und Shatterhand im Tal der Toten (1968)
[edit] Karl May festivals
The most famous Karl May festivals are the open air festivals held every summer in Bad Segeberg, Schleswig-Holstein, and in Lennestadt-Elspe, North Rhine-Westphalia, where for ten years movie actor Pierre Brice played his Winnetou character in a live version. Another open air Karl May stage is in Rathen, Saxony, near the village of Radebeul, where May lived and died.
[edit] See also
[edit] Literature
- Hans Wollschläger: Karl May. Grundriß eines gebrochenen Lebens (1965, 1976, 2004) (German)
[edit] External links and references
- Karl May in the German National Library catalogue
- Karl May Verlag, Bamberg-Radebeul
- Karl Friedrich May Papers at Gettysburg College
- Website of the Dutch Karl May society, mainly in Dutch, homepage also in English.
[edit] Karl May's works in English
- Nemsi Books (Publisher of new unabridged English translations of Karl May's works)
- Works by Karl May at Project Gutenberg
- Karl May Gesellschaft - English Homepage
- Winnetou, The Apache Knight Diggory Press ISBN 978-1846856976
- Winnetou, The Treasure of Nugget Mountain Diggory Press, ISBN 978-1846856976
[edit] Other English sites
- Karl May Links
- First English language Karl May forum
- Karl Friedrich May Papers at Gettysburg College
[edit] German sites
- Karl May Gesellschaft e.V. (Karl May Society - registered) (free texts)
- Karl-May-Museum in Radebeul
- Karl-May-Wiki
Compositions by Karl May:
- Free scores by Karl May in the Werner Icking Music Archive (WIMA)
- Karl May free scores in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
Persondata | |
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NAME | May, Karl Friedrich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | de la Escosura, Capitan Ramon Diaz (pseudonym); Hobble-Frank, Gisela M. (pseudonym); Hohenthal, Karl (pseudonym); Jam, D. (pseudonym); Lautréamont, Prinz Muhamel (pseudonym); von Linden, Ernst (pseudonym); van der Löwen, P. (pseudonym); Pollmer, Emma (pseudonym) |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | German writer; author |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 25, 1842 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Ernstthal, Kingdom of Saxony |
DATE OF DEATH | March 30, 1912 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Radebeul, Germany |