Kinderseele

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kinderseele
Image:Kinderseele.jpg
Cover of the 12th edition
(paperback version)
Author Hermann Hesse
Country Germany/Switzerland
Language German
Genre(s) fiction, short stories
Publisher Neuen Rundschau
Publication date November, 1919
Pages 80
ISBN 3518377035

Kinderseele is a short story written by Hermann Hesse. He wrote it between the end of 1918 and the beginning of 1919, at the age of 41. At that time Hesse lived in Bern, Switzerland, where he emigrated to after he had lost his father in 1916, and while his wife and one of his three sons had fallen seriously ill. In addition, he himself was under psychiatric treatment. Kinderseele was published in November 1919 in the Neuen Rundschau under the pen name Emil Sinclair. It then appeared under his name in the anthology Klingsors letzter Sommer in 1920.

It has also given its name to an anthology of Hesse novellas and short stories.

[edit] Plot summary

One day Hermann Hesse, an eleven-year-old boy, returns from school and as nobody is at home he goes upstairs into his father’s room where he steals sugared and dried figs out of his dad’s chest of drawers. Although he has pangs of conscience and thinks a lot about his deed, he does not confess it to his father. Hermann pretends to have bought the figs at the cake shop in Calw. That is why his father punishes him by taking him there; but before entering the shop, the boy tells that he did not get them there. At home he finally admits that he stole the figs. The book ends with the phrase: “Als ich im Bett lag, hatte ich die Gewissheit, dass er mir ganz und vollkommen verziehen habe – vollkommener als ich ihm.”

Hesse himself made a comment on his book in a letter to his sister Adele, in which he stated that the way described in Kinderssele was one of extremely straight psychology and love of truth.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

The film was made for Hermann Hesse’s 100th anniversary in 1977. It is a Schmelzer-Stapenhorst production.

Actors:

  • Hanna Schäfer (as Hermann Hesse),
  • Gerd Böckmann (as Hesse’s father),
  • Barbara Ostern (as Hesse’s mother).
  • Narrator: Dieter Borsche.
  • Screenplay writer: Martin Schmelzer.
  • Running time: 40 minutes.

[edit] External links

This short story-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.