作者 人物列表
席勒 Friedrich von Schiller戈特霍尔德·埃弗拉伊姆·莱辛 Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
让·保尔 Jean Paul
让·保尔 Jean Paul
作者  (1763年3月21日1825年11月14日)
Johann Paul Friedrich Richter
约翰·保尔·弗里德里希·里希特

Jean Paul
让·保罗(德語:Jean Paul,1763年3月21日-1825年11月14日),原名Johann Paul Friedrich Richter,德国作家,德国浪漫主义文学的先驱。

让·保尔:Jean Paul
生卒年:1763-1825
代表作:短篇小说《武茨》等
作品特点:形式散漫,结构松散,但语言很有魅力,是幽默小说的典型。
详细介绍:德国小说家。原名为里希特尔。父亲是乡村教师,还当过牧师和管风琴师。让·保尔在农村度过了童年。父亲死后家境贫寒,1781年入莱比锡大学攻读神学,1784年被迫辍学,在家乡当教师。大学时开始创作,早期作品是一些讥讽性的答语与警句.1790年经历了亲友的自杀或早故,人生态度转向人类狭窄的爱,形成了幽默的文风,标志着让·保尔创作的转折,是幽默小说的典型。他的大部分小说是在此后十年中创作的。短篇小说《武茨》等给他带来了盛名。1795年发表的《黄昏星》引起了魏玛文人的注意,与赫尔德结成了终生友谊。他的《美学入门》中把小说分成三类。他的小说思想受到十八世纪英国作家斯威夫特和其他小说家,尤其是劳伦斯·斯特恩的影响。他的作品对后来的画家,作家产生深远的影响。

语言风格

编辑
让·保尔的原名是里希特尔,他以创新了一种写作风格而备受尊敬,其名气之大甚至甚于其作品被阅读的程度。这种风格以怪异传世,为间接的嘲讽和利用不完全的参考资料观察外界社会。其作品包括许多狂喜,幽默,精巧奇特的段落形态,探讨人物间的冲突,通常涉及理想主义者和现实主义者之间以及灵魂和肉体二元性间的冲突,他是一位狂想,杰出和可爱的作家;是一位富有想象力的浪漫大师。不过,其作品的阅读是需要一点耐心,其中并不缺乏精彩的好故事。  


Jean Paul (German: [ʒɑ̃ paʊl] (About this soundlisten); born Johann Paul Friedrich Richter, 21 March 1763 – 14 November 1825) was a German Romantic writer, best known for his humorous novels and stories.

Life and work

Jean Paul was born at Wunsiedel, in the Fichtelgebirge mountains (Franconia). His father was an organist at Wunsiedel. In 1765 his father became a pastor at Joditz near Hof and, in 1767 at Schwarzenbach, but he died on 25 April 1779, leaving the family in great poverty.[citation needed] Later in life, Jean Paul noted, "The words that a father speaks to his children in the privacy of home are not heard by the world, but as in whispering-galleries, they are clearly heard at the end and by posterity." After attending the Gymnasium at Hof, in 1781 Jean Paul went to the University of Leipzig. His original intention was to enter his father's profession, but theology did not interest him, and he soon devoted himself wholly to the study of literature. Unable to maintain himself at Leipzig he returned in 1784 to Hof, where he lived with his mother. From 1787 to 1789 he served as a tutor at Töpen, a village near Hof; and from 1790 to 1794 he taught the children of several families in a school he had founded in nearby Schwarzenbach.

Jean Paul began his career as a man of letters with Grönländische Prozesse ("Greenland Lawsuits"), published anonymously in Berlin in 1783–84, and Auswahl aus des Teufels Papieren ("Selections from the Devil's Papers", signed J. P. F. Hasus), published in 1789. These works were not received with much favour, and in later life even their author had little sympathy for their satirical tone.

Jean Paul's outlook was profoundly altered by a spiritual crisis he suffered on 15 November 1790, in which he had a vision of his own death. His next book, Die unsichtbare Loge ("The Invisible Lodge"), a romance published in 1793 under the pen-name Jean Paul (in honour of Jean-Jacques Rousseau), had all the qualities that were soon to make him famous, and its power was immediately recognized by some of the best critics of the day.

Encouraged by the reception of Die unsichtbare Loge, Richter composed a number of books in rapid succession: Leben des vergnügten Schulmeisterleins Maria Wutz in Auenthal ("Life of the Cheerful Schoolmaster Maria Wutz", 1793), the best-selling Hesperus (1795), which made him famous, Biographische Belustigungen unter der Gehirnschale einer Riesin ("Biographical Recreations under the Brainpan of a Giantess", 1796), Leben des Quintus Fixlein ("Life of Quintus Fixlein", 1796), Der Jubelsenior ("The Parson in Jubilee", 1797), and Das Kampaner Tal ("The Valley of Campan", 1797). Also among these was the novel Siebenkäs in 1796–97.

Siebenkäs' slightly supernatural theme, involving a Doppelgänger and pseudocide, stirred some controversy over its interpretation of the Resurrection, but these criticisms served only to draw awareness to the author. This series of writings assured Richter a place in German literature, and during the rest of his life every work he produced was welcomed by a wide circle of admirers.

After his mother's death in 1797, Richter went to Leipzig, and in the following year, to Weimar, where he started work on his most ambitious novel, Titan, published between 1800 and 1803. Richter became friends with such Weimar notables as Johann Gottfried Herder, by whom he was warmly appreciated, but despite their close proximity, Richter never became close to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe or Friedrich Schiller, both of whom found his literary methods repugnant; but in Weimar, as elsewhere, his remarkable conversational powers and his genial manners made him a favorite in general society. The English writers Thomas Carlyle and Thomas De Quincey took an interest in Jean Paul's work.

The Jean Paul monument in Bayreuth, created by Ludwig von Schwanthaler and unveiled in 1841 on the 16th anniversary of Richter's death

In 1801 he married Caroline Meyer, whom he had met in Berlin the year before. They lived first at Meiningen, then at Coburg; and finally, in 1804, they settled at Bayreuth. Here Richter spent a quiet, simple, and happy life, constantly occupied with his work as a writer. In 1808 he was delivered from anxiety about outward necessities by Prince Primate Karl Theodor von Dalberg, who gave him an annual pension of 1,000 florins, which was later continued by the king of Bavaria.

Jean Paul's Titan was followed by Flegeljahre ("The Awkward Age", 1804–5). His later imaginative works were Dr Katzenbergers Badereise ("Dr Katzenberger's Trip to the Medicinal Springs", 1809), Des Feldpredigers Schmelzle Reise nach Flätz ("Army Chaplain Schmelzle's Voyage to Flätz", 1809), Leben Fibels ("Life of Fibel", 1812), and Der Komet, oder Nikolaus Marggraf ("The Comet, or, Nikolaus Markgraf", 1820–22). In Vorschule der Aesthetik ("Introduction to Aesthetics", 1804) he expounded his ideas on art; he discussed the principles of education in Levana, oder Erziehungslehre ("Levana, or, Pedagogy", 1807); and the opinions suggested by current events he set forth in Friedenspredigt ("Peace Sermon", 1808), Dämmerungen für Deutschland ("Twilights for Germany", 1809), Mars und Phöbus Thronwechsel im Jahre 1814 ("Mars and Phoebus Exchange Thrones in the Year 1814", 1814), and Politische Fastenpredigten ("Political Lenten Sermons", 1817). In his last years he began Wahrheit aus Jean Pauls Leben ("The Truth from Jean Paul's Life"), to which additions from his papers and other sources were made after his death by C. Otto and E. Förster.

Also during this time he supported the younger writer E. T. A. Hoffmann, who long counted Richter among his influences. Richter wrote the preface to Fantasy Pieces, a collection of Hoffmann's short stories published in 1814.[citation needed]

In September 1821 Jean Paul lost his only son, Max, a youth of the highest promise; and he never quite recovered from this shock. He lost his sight in 1824,[citation needed] and died of dropsy at Bayreuth, on 14 November 1825.

Characteristics of his work

Jean Paul occupies an unusual position in German literature and has always divided the literary public. Some hold him in highest veneration while others treat his work with indifference. He took the Romantic formlessness of the novel to extremes: Schlegel called his novels soliloquies, in which he makes his readers take part (in this respect going even further than Laurence Sterne in Tristram Shandy). Jean Paul habitually played with a multitude of droll and bizarre ideas: his work is characterized by wild metaphors as well as by digressive and partly labyrinthine plots. He mixed contemplation with literary theory: alongside spirited irony the reader finds bitter satire and mild humour; next to soberly realistic passages there are romanticized and often ironically-curtailed idyllssocial commentary and political statements. The quick changes of mood attracted the composer Schumann whose Papillons was inspired by Jean Paul.

His novels were especially admired by women. This was due to the empathy with which Jean Paul created the female characters in his works: never before in German literature were women represented with such psychological depth. At the same time however, his work contains misogynistic quips. Jean Paul's character may have been as diverse and as confusing as many of his novels: he was said to be very sociable and witty, while at the same time extremely sentimental: having an almost childlike nature, quickly moved to tears. It is obvious from his works that his interests encompassed not only literature but also astronomy and other sciences.

It is no surprise that the relationship of so capricious an author with the Weimar classicists Goethe and Schiller always remained ambivalent: Schiller once remarked that Jean Paul was as alien to him as someone who fell from the moon, and that he might have been worthy of admiration "if he had made as good use of his riches as other men made of their poverty." Herder and Wieland on the other hand fully appreciated his work and supported him. Although he always kept his distance from the classicists, who wanted to "absolutize" art, and although his theoretical approach (most notably in his Introduction to Aesthetics) was considerably influenced by Romanticism, it would be misleading to call him a Romantic without qualification. Here too he kept his distance: with all his subjectivism he didn't absolutize the subject of the author as the Romantics often did. Jean Paul had what had become rare amidst classical severity and romantic irony: humour. He also was one of the first who approached humour from a theoretical standpoint.

He thought that both the Enlightenment and metaphysics had failed, though they still held importance for his worldview. He arrived at a philosophy without illusions, and a state of humorous resignation. Correspondingly he was one of the first defenders of Schopenhauer's philosophy. He didn't try to indoctrinate but to portray human happiness, even (and especially) in an increasingly alienated environment — the rococo castles and bleak villages of Upper Franconia. Jean Paul was not only the first to use and name the literary motif of the Doppelgänger, he also utilised it in countless variations (e.g. Siebenkäs and Leibgeber, Liane and Idoine, Roquairol and Albano). In his novel Siebenkäs he defines the Doppelgänger as the "people who see themselves."

Jean Paul was a lifelong defender of freedom of the press and his campaigns against censorship went beyond many of his contemporaries. In his Freiheitsbüchlein (1805), he maintains that books belong to humanity and should have the chance to have an impact on all times, not just the present moment, and therefore preventing a book from being published renders the censor a judge not just for contemporary society but for all future societies. Censorship is not feasible because it would be impossible to find a person able to fulfill the true requirements of the office. After the great achievements of the eighteenth century, the prospect of complete freedom of opinion, speech, and printing was real. Even under the tightened conditions of the Napoleonic occupation, Jean Paul continued to speak out in favor of reason, as in his Friedens-Predigt an Deutschland (1808). The last section of his Politische Fastenpredigten (1816) contains a warning to rulers that minds cannot be controlled, and that police action will only cause them to eventually explode like a champagne bottle.

Other

Rudolf Steiner edited a multi-volume collection of the works of Jean Paul. In published lectures, Steiner often mentioned the realization by the 7-year-old Jean Paul that he was an individual "Ego", expressed in Paul's surprise at understanding that "I am an I".

Quotations

  • The long sleep of death closes our scars, and the short sleep of life our wounds. (Der lange Schlaf des Todes schliesst unsere Narben zu, und der kurze des Lebens unsere WundenHesperus, XX).

Works

Titan. 1

English translations

Richter's more important works have been translated into English, for example:

  • Quintus Fixlein and Schmelzles Reise, by Carlyle
  • Walt and Vult [Flegeljahre] by Eliza Lee (1846)
  • Titan by Brooks (1863)
  • Flower, Fruit, and Thorn Pieces by Alexander Ewing (1877)
  • Levana by Wood (1887)

Musical reception (selection)

Jean-Paul-Gymnasium Hof
  • Robert SchumannPapillons pour le pianoforte seul, 1832.
  • Johann Friedrich Kittl: Wär’ ich ein Stern, 1838.
  • Robert Schumann: Blumenstück, 1839.
  • Carl Grünbaum: Lied (Es zieht in schöner Nacht der Sternenhimmel), 1840.
  • Ernst Friedrich Kauffmann: Ständchen nach Jean Paul, 1848.
  • Carl ReineckeO wär’ ich ein Stern (from: Flegeljahre), 1850.
  • Stephen HellerBlumen-, Frucht- und Dornenstücke (Nuits blanches), 1850.
  • Marta von Sabinin: O wär ich ein Stern, 1855.
  • Ernst Methfessel: An Wina, 1866.
  • Gustav MahlerSinfonie Nr. 1 in D-Dur (Titan), 1889.
  • Ferdinand Heinrich Thieriot: Leben und Sterben des vergnügten Schulmeisterlein Wuz, 1900.
  • Hugo Leichtentritt: Grabschrift des Zephyrs, 1910.
  • Henri SauguetPolymetres, 1936.
  • Eduard Künnecke: Flegeljahre, 1937.
  • Karl Kraft: Fünf kleine Gesänge auf Verse des Jean Paul für Singstimme und Klavier, 1960.
  • Walter Zimmermann: Glockenspiel für einen Schlagzeuger, 1983.
  • Wolfgang RihmAndere Schatten (from: Siebenkäs), 1985.
  • Oskar SalaRede des toten Christus vom Weltgebäude herab, dass kein Gott sei, 1990.
  • Iván ErődBlumenstück für Viola solo, 1995.
  • Thomas BeimelIdyllen, 1998/99.
  • Christoph Weinhart: Albanos Traum, 2006.
  • Georg Friedrich HaasBlumenstück (from: Siebenkäs), 2009.
  • Ludger StühlmeyerZum Engel der letzten Stunde (from: Das Leben des Quintus Fixlein), 2013.

Notes

  1. Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l Chisholm 1911.
  2. ^ Chamberlain, Alexander (1896). The Child and Childhood in Folk Thought: (The Child in Primitive Culture), p. 389. MacMillan.
  3. Jump up to:a b c Americana staff 1920.
  4. ^ Hindley, Meredith (2009). "The Voracious Pen of Thomas Carlyle". Humanities30: 228–230.
  5. ^ Explicating Jean Paul: Robert Schumann's Program for "Papillons," Op. 2 Eric Frederick Jensen 19th-Century Music, Vol. 22, No. 2 (Autumn, 1998), pp. 127-143 Published by: University of California Press. Accessed via JSTOR (subscription required). Article DOI: 10.2307/746854 Article Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/746854
  6. Jump up to:a b c d e Ohe, Werner von der; McCarthy, John A. (2013). Zensur und Kultur: Zwischen Weimarer Klassik und Weimarer Republik mit einem Ausblick bis heute. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 99–109.
  7. ^ Selg, Peter (1 August 2015). Rudolf Steiner, Life and Work Volume 2 (1890-1900). SteinerBooks. ISBN 9781621480877.

References

Attribution

Further reading

  • Fleming, Paul. The Pleasures of Abandonment: Jean Paul and the Life of Humor. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann, 2006.

Nineteenth-century works on Jean Paul

Richter's Sämtliche Werke (Complete Works) appeared in 1826–1828 in 60 volumes, to which were added 5 volumes of Literarischer Nachlass (literary bequest) in 1836–1838; a second edition was published in 1840–1842 (33 volumes); a third in 1860–1862 (24 volumes). The last complete edition is that edited by R. Gottschall (60 parts, 1879).

Editions of selected works appeared in 16 volumes (1865), in Kürschner's Deutsche Nationalliteratur (edited by P. Nerrlich, 6 vols, pp. 388–487), &c. The chief collections of Richter's correspondence are:

  • Jean Pauls Briefe an F. H. Jacobi (1828)
  • Briefwechsel Jean Pauls mit seinem Freunde C. Otto (1829–33)
  • Briefwechsel zwischen H. Voss und Jean Paul (1833)
  • Briefe an eine Jugendfreundin (1858)
  • P. Nerrlich, Jean Pauls Briefwechsel mit seiner Frau und seinem Freunde Otto (1902).

See further:

  • The continuation of Richter's autobiography by C. Otto and E. Fürster (1826–33)
  • H. Dring, J. P. F. Richter's Leben und Charakteristik (1830–32)
  • Richard Otto SpazierJPF Richter: ein biographischer Commentar zu dessen Werken (5 vols, 1833)
  • E. Förster, Denkwürdigkeiten aus dem Leben von J. P. F. Richter (1863)
  • Paul Nerrlich, Jean Paul und seine Zeitgenossen (1876)
  • J. Firmery, Étude sur la vie et les œuvres de J. P. F. Richter (1886)
  • P. Nerrlich, Jean Paul, sein Leben und seine Werke (1889)
  • Ferdinand Josef SchneiderJean Pauls Altersdichtung (1901); and Jean Pauls Jugend und erstes Auftreten in der Literatur (1906).
  • Thomas Carlyle's two essays on Richter.
 
    

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