Stefan George (1868–1933)
Author of Gedichte
About the Author
Aristocratic and recondite, George deliberately wrote difficult poetry for those few he believed destined to understand him. Gathered about him was a group of gifted, often physically beautiful young men, the so-called George Kreis (George Circle), to whom he charged the spreading of his ideas. show more George's poems continue to influence young writers---not so much for their themes as for their austere formal style and perfection of diction; a diction expanded by his vast knowledge of languages, both ancient and modern. Many young poets today would aspire to Bithell's praise: "George paints with vowels or plays on them just as a pianist plays on keys; he tangles his construction; he swathes the inner meaning of the poem in a floating veil of symbol." (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Statue of Stefan George, Bingen am Rhein, Germany. Photo by user E.peiffer@gmx.net / Wikimedia Commons.
Series
Works by Stefan George
Der Teppich des Lebens und die Lieder von Traum und Tod mit einem Vorspiel (1984) 15 copies, 2 reviews
Die Bücher der Hirten- und Preisgedichte, der Sagen und Sänge und der hängenden Gärten (1921) 10 copies, 1 review
Nada hay donde la palabra quiebra: Antología de poesía y prosa (La Dicha de Enmudecer) (2011) 4 copies
Gesamt-Ausgabe der Werke endglueltige Fassung. Baudelaire die Blumen des Bösen Umdichtungen (1983) 3 copies
Deutsche Dichtung 2 copies
Shakespeare Sonnette Umdichtung ; vermehrt um einige Stücke aus dem liebenden Pilgrim (2008) 2 copies
Deutsche Dichtung . Erster Band: Jean Paul. Herausgegeben und eingeleitet von Stefan George und Karl Wolfskehl (Deutsche Dichtung, 1) (1989) 2 copies
Zeitgenössische Dichter Bd. 2 Verlaine, Mallarme, Rimbaud, De Regnier, D'Annunzio, Rolicz-Lieder 2 copies
Stefan George - Gesamtausgabe der Werke : Faksimile und Volltext. (Digitale Bibliothek 99) (2004) 2 copies
Poèmes. Dichtungen. Bilingue 1 copy
Sämtliche Werke in 18 Bänden. Bd. 13/14. Baudelaire - Die Blumen des Bösen - Umdichtungen (1983) — Author; Translator — 1 copy
Stefan George Bilder u. Bücher aus d. Nachlass ; (mit Katalog d. Stefan-George-Gedenkstätte) 2e Teil 1 copy, 1 review
Die Gedichte 1 copy
Associated Works
World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time (1998) — Contributor — 496 copies, 2 reviews
Oogst Der Tijden. keur uit de werken van schrijvers en dichters aller volken en eeuwen (1940) — Contributor — 12 copies
Bij de uitverkorenen vertalingen uit het oeuvre van geliefde dichters — Contributor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1868-07-12
- Date of death
- 1933-12-04
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- poet
editor
translator - Organizations
- George-Kreis
- Awards and honors
- Goethepreis der Stadt Frankfurt (1927)
- Relationships
- Wolfskehl, Karl (collaborator)
Kantorowicz, Ernst H. (colleague) - Nationality
- Germany
- Birthplace
- Büdesheim, Grand Duchy of Hesse
- Places of residence
- Büdesheim, Grand Duchy of Hesse (birth ∙ now Germany)
London, England, UK
Paris, France - Place of death
- Minusio, Switzerland
Members
Reviews
A superb anthology of poetry written during Goethe's period, beautfully printed in the elegant font designed by Stefan George.
Stefan George pflegte zu Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts eine Bekanntschaft mit dem jungen Maximilian Kronberger, der 1904 im Alter von nur 16 Jahren starb. Schwer betroffen von dessen Tod schuf George Maximin. Ein Gedenkbuch, in dem er die Figur des Maximin zu einem menschgewordenen Gott stilisierte. Der Folioband umfasst 56 nicht paginierte Seiten, die in reich vergoldetes Pergament gebunden sind. Insgesamt erschienen nur 200 nummerierte Exemplare.
This is a strange and beautiful book, a loving show more paean to a dead boy-poet from another poet, Stefan George (1868–1933), published in 1907. The “Maximin” of the title was Maximilian Kronberger (1888–1904) who was around 14 when he met George; the older man was 34 at the time. George was apparently smitten by the boy, and devastated when he died from meningitis two years later. Maximin: ein Gedenkbuch (A Memorial Book) is the result, a collection of mournful poems, beautifully designed and illustrated by Melchior Lechter in that rectilinear Art Nouveau style which the artist made his own. The memory of the dead Maximin became for George a quasi-religious obsession which makes Maximin the bible of the homosocial cult that George subsequently encouraged.
What’s most surprising about all this behaviour is that it did nothing at all to harm his reputation, even among the Nazis who later revered his poetry. George was a contemporary of Oscar Wilde but the pair were poles apart in character, George’s chilly, high-minded aestheticism preserving him from the brickbats aimed at Wilde and others. Nonetheless, the inherent camp that results from the combination of such a remote attitude combined with flagrant boy-worship secured for George a place alongside Wilde in Philip Core’s essential Camp: The Lie that Tells the Truth (1984):
Strangely enough his overtly (if classically) homosexual verses, his preference for beautiful youth, and his severe black-clad dignity, all became immensely popular in the land of brüderschaft (brothers’ love). The camp Classicism of his ‘academy’ of the spirit, in surroundings of neo-Classical kitsch, hit just the right middle ground between Edwardian sentimentality and Hitlerian Imperialism.
Maximin: ein Gedenkbuch may be browsed or downloaded at the University of Heidelberg. There’s a more academic examination of George’s homoerotics here. Further page samples follow. show less
This is a strange and beautiful book, a loving show more paean to a dead boy-poet from another poet, Stefan George (1868–1933), published in 1907. The “Maximin” of the title was Maximilian Kronberger (1888–1904) who was around 14 when he met George; the older man was 34 at the time. George was apparently smitten by the boy, and devastated when he died from meningitis two years later. Maximin: ein Gedenkbuch (A Memorial Book) is the result, a collection of mournful poems, beautifully designed and illustrated by Melchior Lechter in that rectilinear Art Nouveau style which the artist made his own. The memory of the dead Maximin became for George a quasi-religious obsession which makes Maximin the bible of the homosocial cult that George subsequently encouraged.
What’s most surprising about all this behaviour is that it did nothing at all to harm his reputation, even among the Nazis who later revered his poetry. George was a contemporary of Oscar Wilde but the pair were poles apart in character, George’s chilly, high-minded aestheticism preserving him from the brickbats aimed at Wilde and others. Nonetheless, the inherent camp that results from the combination of such a remote attitude combined with flagrant boy-worship secured for George a place alongside Wilde in Philip Core’s essential Camp: The Lie that Tells the Truth (1984):
Strangely enough his overtly (if classically) homosexual verses, his preference for beautiful youth, and his severe black-clad dignity, all became immensely popular in the land of brüderschaft (brothers’ love). The camp Classicism of his ‘academy’ of the spirit, in surroundings of neo-Classical kitsch, hit just the right middle ground between Edwardian sentimentality and Hitlerian Imperialism.
Maximin: ein Gedenkbuch may be browsed or downloaded at the University of Heidelberg. There’s a more academic examination of George’s homoerotics here. Further page samples follow. show less
Dec 31, 2016Dutch
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