Stephan Hermlin

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Stephan Hermlin (April 13, 1915 - April 6, 1997), real name Rudolf Leder, was a German author. He wrote, among other things, stories, essays, translations, and lyric poetry and was one of the more well-known authors of former East Germany.

[edit] Life

Hermlin was born in 1915 in Chemnitz, Germany, in what is now the Federal State of Saxony, the son of Jewish immigrant, he grew both in Chemnitz and in Berlin. In 1931, he joined a communist youth organization. From 1933 until 1936, he worked as a printer's apprentice. He emigrated from Germany in 1936, and between then and his return to Germany in 1945 at the end of World War II, lived in Palestine, France, and Switzerland. After his return to Germany, he worked as a radio broadcaster in Frankfurt am Main. He moved to East Berlin in 1947, and was a contributor to several communist magazines, including Täglichen Rundschau, Ulenspiegel, Aufbau, and Sinn und Form. Täglichen Rundschau (English: Daily Review) was the official newspaper of the Soviet military force occupying East Berlin at the time. As the author of several well-known pro-Stalin propaganda songs, Hermlin soon was working in some of the most important governmental bodies in the Soviet-occupied zone of Germany. By 1949, he was one of the most powerful and influential writers in the newly-founded German Democratic Republic. As a close friend of Walter Ulbricht and Erich Honecker, Hermlin soon found himself at the forefront of East German culture and politics, and split his time between them.

In December of 1962 Hermlin joined the initiators of a group dedicated to the reading of young poets at the East German Akademie der Künste (English: Academy of Arts). Some of the poets featured by this group included Wolf Biermann, Volker Braun, Bernd Jentzsch, Sarah Kirsch, and Karl Mickel. This group, and the Akademie der Künste as a whole, was at the forefront of a spike in the popularity of lyric poetry in 1960s East Germany. Thereupon, he was relieved of his position of Secretary of Poetry at the Akademie, although he remained a member. He was a critic of the Soviet crushing of the Prague Spring rebellion of 1968, although he did not make these criticisms very open. He was much more open in his criticism of the East German government's 1976 expulsion of a contemporary poet, Wolf Biermann, whose poetry Hermlin exhibited some years previously. Going against the official politics of the day, he, in conjunction with Erich Honecker, organized a conference of writers dedicated to the furthering of peace and reconciliation, the Berliner Begegnung. He was also a member of the Schriftstellerverband der DDR and the Akademie der Künste West Berlin (English: East German Writer's Association and West Berlin Academy of the Arts, respectively).

After German reunification in 1989, Hermlin was criticized for his positions on the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961 and the 1953 East German Uprising. In addition, several details of his earlier life were called into question. In particular, Hessian literary critic Karl Corino implied that Hermlin's father had not been a concentration camp prisoner, and that Hermlin had neither served as an officer in the Spanish Civil War nor had he been an active member of the French Resistance. Corino continued to be a harsh critic of Hermlin, even though some of Hermlin's works were intended to be only semi-autobiographical, and not completely factual in nature. The debate about the veracity of Hermlin's works is considered to be the third greatest debate of modern German literature, after the controversy surrounding Christa Wolf's novel Was Bleibt and the debate concerning the stagnation of post-reunification German literature itself.

[edit] Awards

  • 1948 Heinrich Heine Award, awarded by the Schutzverband Deutscher Autoren (English: Association of German Authors)
  • 1950 National Award, awarded by the East German government, for the Mansfeld Speech
  • 1954 National Award, awarded by the East German government, for work on a documentary about Ludwig van Beethoven
  • 1958 F.C. Weiskopf Award
  • 1972 Heinrich Heine Award, awarded by the East German Cultural Ministry
  • 1975 National Award, awarded by the East German government

[edit] External links

(German) Hermlin's official biography

This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding German Wikipedia article as of 5 July 2006.