Günter Eich

Günter Eich (German pronunciation: [ˈɡʏntɐ ˈaɪç]; 1 February 1907 - 20 December 1972) was a German lyricist, dramatist, and author. He was born in Lebus, on the Oder River, and educated in Leipzig, Berlin, and Paris.

After being held as a prisoner of war, he was one of the founders in 1947 of Gruppe 47, and for poems in his then unpublished Abgelegene Gehöfte, he was one of the first two recipients, in 1950, of its Literature Prize for young writers.

He published prose, poetry, and radio plays over the rest of his life. In 1953, he married the Austrian writer Ilse Aichinger. They lived in Germany, but he died in Salzburg.

His collected works were published in four volumes in 1991.

James Dickey opened his 1965 poem "The Firebombing," about a nighttime air raid on the Japanese town of Beppu, with this epigraph from Eich's work:

Denke daran, dass nach den großen Zerstörungen
Jedermann beweisen wird, dass er unschuldig war.

roughly:

Think of this: that after the great destructions
every man will attest that he was innocent.

Contents

Writing

Before the Third Reich

Eich was a contributor to Ana Victoria, a literary magazine.[1] "Die Kolonne" is seen as a reaction against contemporary Modernist literary trends,[2] and rests on three central principles: "the essential timelessness of the inner life, the notion of the genius as representative of his age, and the religious function of art."[3] Eich believed in a fundamental incompatibility between poetry and politics and in his essay, "Bemerkungen über Lyrik", he drew a line between the poet "als Lyriker" and "als Privatmann" which allows poets to be politically active as long as it does not impinge on their work.[4]

Eich is regarded as a literary conservative and his public association with a staunchly critical review of Johannes R. Becher's poem "Der Große Plan" attests to this. According to Cuomo, "The most fitting overall characterisation of '[Die Kolonne]' would not be liberal or progressive, but conservative."[5] "Die Kolonne" was strongly representative of Eich’s own aesthetic and ideological views, and although largely apolitical, it appeared to favour conservative ideology. Despite this apparent conservatism, the journal aimed to separate literature from any political influence.

During the Third Reich

The majority of Eich's literary output in this period were radio plays, which numbered 160.[6] The most well known of these today is Rebellion in der Goldstadt, which was only recently discovered. The play was broadcast on the 8th of May 1940 in an anti-British radio campaign the Goebbels' Propaganda Ministry was waging. It deals with a South African mine and its workers striking against the poor wages they receive from the overtly capitalist British owner, Lord Pembroke. There is some contention surrounding Eich's complete authorship of the play as there is no broadcast text in his handwriting.[7] Furthermore, Scene '1a' seems to be a late addition to the play, and takes on a stronger anti-capitalist/British sentiment.

Response to the Machtergreifung

After the war, Eich made many public statements about the role of artists in standing up against oppressive regimes: "If our work cannot be understood as criticism, as opposition and resistance, [...] then we are positive and decorate the slaughterhouse with geraniums."[8] and "Seid unbequem, seid Sand, nicht das Öl im Getriebe der Welt!"[9] which translates as "Be inconvenient, be sand, not oil in the gears of the world!"

These statements, however, stand in stark contrast to his actions during the Third Reich. His radio plays were often tailored to fit the propagandistic needs of the Nazi party, extolling the Blut und Boden rural life and denouncing the decadent capitalism of the regime's enemies. It is believed that Eich had pragmatic reasons for writing all of his radio plays:

Eichs Rundfunktätigkeit beschränkte sich auf den Hörspielbereich und diente dem Broterwerb. [...] Wie viele Hörspiele, Märchenbearbeitungen, Kalenderblätter Eich auch schrieb, niemals hat er damit «Karriere« gemacht.

Eich's broadcasting activity was limited to radio plays and breadwinning. Like many of the radio plays, fairy tale adaptation and calendar pages that Eich also wrote he never tried to 'make a career' out of it.

Literary prizes

Eich received numerous literary prizes after World War II including one from the literary association of which he was a member, Gruppe 47 in 1950, the Georg-Büchner-Preis in 1959, and the Schiller-Gedächtnispreis in 1968.

Notes

  1. ^ Philpotts, M., The Margins of Dictatorship: Assent and Dissent in the Work of Günter Eich and Bertolt Brecht (Oxford: Lang, 2003), p. 170.
  2. ^ Philpotts, p. 172).
  3. ^ Dolan, J. P., The Theory and Practice of Apolitical Literature: Die Kolonne 1929-1932‘, Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature, 1 (1977), p. 158
  4. ^ Philpotts, p. 185
  5. ^ Cuomo, p. 19
  6. ^ Cuomo, G. R., ‘Opposition or Opportunism? Gunter Eich’s Status as Inner Emigrant’ in Donahue, N. and D. Kirchner (eds), Flight of Fantasy (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2005), pp. 176-87, p. 178.
  7. ^ Donahue, N. and D. Kirchner (eds), Flight of Fantasy (Oxford: Berghahn Books, 2005), pp. 176-87, p. 181
  8. ^ Eich, Gunter, Vermischte Schriften, Axel Vieregg (ed.), Vol. IV of Gesammelte Werke in vier Bänden, Karl Karst et al. (eds) (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1991), p. 627.
  9. ^ Günter Eich: Träume (1950), in: Günter Eich, Fünfzehn Hörspiele, (Frankfurt: 1981) p. 88

External links