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INTRODUCTION2

DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS3

CONCLUSION8

WORK CITED9

Nobel Prize of Literature Of 1912

Introduction

Gerhart Hauptmann, probably Germany's greatest modern playwright, was born the son of an innkeeper in the Silesian village of Obersalzbrunn. As a child, he grew up under the influence of his parents' Moravian religion in a home that was remarkable for its air of piety and mysticism. As a young man, Hauptmann failed to prepare himself adequately for a career at one of the German universities and as a result studied agriculture for a time. He left the soil, however, to study art at the Royal College of Art at Breslau in 1880-1881. He went to Rome to study sculpture in 1883. Between these two periods of study, he traveled throughout western Europe. Leisure for him to begin a career of writing was afforded by a marriage to Marie Thienemann, a wealthy young German woman, in 1885. He and his wife divorced ten years later. The marriage left its scars upon Hauptmann, who subsequently referred to it as a time of torture.

As early as 1885, Hauptmann became interested in politics, especially in the liberal social-democrat movement. He joined a liberal literary society called “Through” and soon became associated with Otto Brahm's Freie Buhne (Free Stage) in Berlin. His Before Dawn was produced in the theater's first season. The play, a study of degeneracy among newly wealthy Silesian peasants, was a sensation at the time because of its naturalism. Hauptmann described the degeneracy with frankness, and he used the appropriate German dialects for each character. The play indicates the influence of Émile Zola's naturalistic fiction on Hauptmann's dramatic theory and practice. During the next three years, Hauptmann wrote plays such as The Reconciliation and Lonely Lives, stories of middle-class and domestic misery which remind the modern reader of Henrik Ibsen's drama. The Weavers, produced in 1892, brought Hauptmann world fame. In this drama about starving workers in the eighteenth century Germany, Hauptmann made use of a collective hero, a device often utilized by later collectivist authors in every genre. As might be expected, liberal groups throughout Europe hailed The Weavers as a rallying point for socialism and labor.

Hauptmann wrote continuously after his success with The Weavers, which was followed by such varied works as The Beaver Coat, The Assumption of Hannele, The Sunken Bell, and Henry of Auë. Many honors were bestowed upon him. During his lifetime, he received honorary degrees from the universities at Prague, Oxford, and Leipzig and from Columbia University in New York. In 1912, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature. His reputation suffered, however, from a fault which revealed itself in his personal life and his work. Hauptmann was a changeable man, seldom constant in anything. From his social-democrat position in the 1890's, he moved so far to the right as to become a functionary of the Nazi regime after Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933. In his work, he moved from one kind of drama to another, with the result that many critics ...
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