Alfred Lichtenstein | |
---|---|
Born | Berlin-Wilmersdorf | 23 August 1889
Died | 25 September 1914 25) near Vermandovillers, Somme, France | (aged
Occupation | Writer |
Citizenship | German |
Alma mater | University of Berlin, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg (law) |
Literary movement | Expressionism |
Notable works | Die Dämmerung (Twilight, poem, 1911)[1] |
Alfred Lichtenstein (23 August 1889 – 25 September 1914) was a German expressionist writer.[2]
From a Jewish family,[3] Lichtenstein grew up in Berlin as the son of a manufacturer. He studied law in Erlangen. His was first noticed after publishing poems and short stories in a grotesque style, which invited comparison with a friend of his, Jakob van Hoddis.
Indeed, there were claims of imitation: while Hoddis created the style, Lichtenstein has enlarged it, it was said. Lichtenstein played with this reputation by writing a short story, called "The Winner", which describes in a scurillous way the random friendship of two young men, wherein one falls victim to the other. By using false names he often made fun of real people from the Berlin literary scene, including himself as Kuno Kohn, a silent shy boy; in "The Winner" a virile van Hoddis kills Kuno Kohn at the end of the story.
Lichtenstein admired the style of the French Symbolist poet Alfred Jarry and not only for his ironic writings. Like Jarry, Lichtenstein rode his bicycle through the town. However he was not to grow old: in 1914, he fell at the front in World War I.
Der einzige Trost ist: traurig sein. Wenn die Traurigkeit in Verzweiflung ausartet, soll man grotesk werden. Man soll spaßeshalber weiter leben. Soll versuchen, in der Erkenntnis, dass das Dasein aus lauter brutalen, hundsgemeinen Scherzen besteht, Erhebung zu finden.
The only solace is: to be sad! If sadness becomes despair: then one should be grotesque! Be a clown, trying to find one's amusement by recognizing that existence consists of sheer brutal and shabby strokes.
— A. Lichtenstein
References
- ↑ See respective article in German Wikipedia.
- ↑ Greenintegerblog (28 June 2011). "The PIP (Project for Innovative Poetry) Blog: Alfred Lichtenstein". The PIP (Project for Innovative Poetry) Blog. Retrieved 24 September 2017.
- ↑ Vivian Liska, "Messianic Endgames in German-Jewish Expressionist Literature" in Europa! Europa?: The Avant-Garde, Modernism and the Fate of a Continent, Walter de Gruyter (2009), p. 346
External links
- Works by or about Alfred Lichtenstein at Wikisource
- German Wikisource has original text related to this article: Alfred Lichtenstein
- Media related to Alfred Lichtenstein at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by Alfred Lichtenstein at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Alfred Lichtenstein at Internet Archive
- Works by Alfred Lichtenstein at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)