Wolfgang Koeppen's Structural Musicality
2 days ago
- #German Literature
- #Wolfgang Koeppen
- #Post-War Novel
- Wolfgang Koeppen was born in 1906 in Greifswald as an illegitimate child to a seamstress and an ophthalmologist.
- He worked various jobs like a bookseller, cook, and factory worker before starting journalism in Berlin in 1931.
- Koeppen wrote early novels with socialist realism themes, but his career was interrupted by the Nazi regime.
- During World War II, he engaged in self-sabotaging activities to avoid military service and survived by hiding.
- Post-war, Koeppen ghostwrote and sold antiques before publishing a trilogy of novels in the 1950s.
- His trilogy includes 'Pigeons in the Grass,' 'The Hothouse,' and 'Death in Rome,' focusing on post-Nazi Germany.
- 'Death in Rome' features a Nazi family reunion in Rome, contrasting with Thomas Mann's 'Death in Venice.'
- Koeppen's writing is noted for its musical, structural prose, using clauses in a contrapuntal style.
- Translator Michael Hofmann successfully adapted Koeppen's complex German prose into English.