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Erich Kästner

Emil Erich Kästner (German: [ˈʔeːʁɪç ˈkɛstnɐ] (listen); 23 February 1899 – 29 July 1974) was a German writer, poet, screenwriter and satirist, known primarily for his humorous, socially astute poems and for children's books including Emil and the Detectives. He received the international Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 1960 for his autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war [de].[1][2] He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in six separate years.[3]

Erich Kästner
Erich Kästner, 1961
BornEmil Erich Kästner
(1899-02-23)23 February 1899
Dresden, Kingdom of Saxony, German Empire
Died29 July 1974(1974-07-29) (aged 75)
Munich, Bavaria, West Germany
OccupationWriter
NationalityGerman
Period1928–1969
GenreChildren's literature, poetry, satire, screenplays
Notable awardsHans Christian Andersen Award for Writing
1960
PartnerLuiselotte Enderle [de]
ChildrenThomas Kästner
Signature

Biography

Dresden 1899–1919

 
Birthplace – memorial plaque

Kästner was born in Dresden, Saxony, and grew up on Königsbrücker Straße in Dresden's Äußere Neustadt. Close by, the Erich Kästner Museum was subsequently opened in the Villa Augustin that had belonged to Kästner's uncle Franz Augustin.[4]

Kästner's father, Emil Richard Kästner, was a master saddlemaker.[5] His mother, Ida Amalia (née Augustin), had been a maidservant, but in her thirties she trained as a hairstylist in order to supplement her husband's income. Kästner had a particularly close relationship with his mother. When he was living in Leipzig and Berlin, he wrote her fairly intimate letters and postcards almost every day, and overbearing mothers make regular appearances in his writings. It has been rumored that Erich Kästner's natural father was the family's Jewish doctor, Emil Zimmermann (1864–1953), but these rumors have never been substantiated.[6] Kästner wrote about his childhood in his autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war [de] (1957, translated as When I Was a Little Boy). According to Kästner, he did not suffer from being an only child, had many friends, and was not lonely or overindulged.

In 1913, Kästner entered a teacher training school in Dresden. However, he dropped out in 1916 shortly before completing the exams that would have qualified him to teach in state schools. He was drafted into the Royal Saxon Army in 1917 and was trained at a heavy artillery unit in Dresden. Kästner was not sent to the front, but the brutality of the military training he underwent and the death of contemporaries he experienced strongly influenced his later antimilitarism. The merciless drilling he was subjected to by his drill sergeant also caused a lifelong heart condition. Kästner portrays this in his poem Sergeant Waurich.

After the end of the war, Kästner went back to school and passed the Abitur exam with distinction, earning a scholarship from the city of Dresden.

Leipzig 1919–1927

In the autumn of 1919, Kästner enrolled at the University of Leipzig to study history, philosophy, German studies, and theater. His studies took him to Rostock and Berlin, and in 1925 he received a doctorate for a thesis on Frederick the Great and German literature. He paid for his studies by working as a journalist and critic for a newspaper, the Neue Leipziger Zeitung. However, his increasingly critical reviews, and the "frivolous" publication of his erotic poem "Abendlied des Kammervirtuosen" (Evening Song of the Chamber Virtuoso) with illustrations by Erich Ohser, led to his dismissal in 1927. That same year, he moved to Berlin, although he continued to write for the Neue Leipziger Zeitung under the pseudonym "Berthold Bürger" ("Bert Citizen") as a freelance correspondent. Kästner later used several other pseudonyms, including "Melchior Kurtz", "Peter Flint", and "Robert Neuner".

Berlin 1927–1933

Kästner's years in Berlin, from 1927 until the end of the Weimar Republic in 1933, were his most productive. He published poems, newspaper columns, articles, and reviews in many of Berlin's important periodicals. He was a regular contributor to dailies such as the Berliner Tageblatt and the Vossische Zeitung, as well as to Die Weltbühne. Hans Sarkowicz and Franz Josef Görtz, the editors of his complete works (1998), list over 350 articles written between 1923 and 1933, but he must have written even more, since many texts are known to have been lost when Kästner's flat burned down during a bombing raid in February 1944.

Kästner published his first book of poems, Herz auf Taille, in 1928, and by 1933 he had published three more collections. His Gebrauchslyrik (Lyrics for Everyday Use) made him one of the leading figure of the Neue Sachlichkeit movement, which focused on using a sobering, distant and objective style to satirise contemporary society.

In the autumn of 1928, he published his best-known children's book, Emil und die Detektive, illustrated by Walter Trier. The owner of the Weltbühne publishing house, Edith Jacobsen, had suggested the idea of writing a detective story to Kästner. The book sold two million copies in Germany alone and has since been translated into 59 languages. The novel was unusual in that, in contrast to most children's literature of the period, it is set in contemporary Berlin and not in a fairy-tale world. Kästner also refrained from overt moralising, letting the characters' actions speak for themselves. Its sequel, Emil und die Drei Zwillinge (1933; Emil and the Three Twins) takes place on the shores of the Baltic. The Emil books may have influenced the creation of other books in the subgenre of literature about child detectives. Emil und die Detektive has been adapted for the cinema five times, three of them in Germany: in 1931, 1935 (UK), 1954, 1964 (USA) and 2001.

Kästner followed this success with Pünktchen und Anton (1931) and Das fliegende Klassenzimmer (1933). Walter Trier's illustration significantly contributed to the books' overwhelming popularity. Das fliegende Klassenzimmer has been adapted for the cinema several times: in 1954 by Kurt Hoffmann, in 1973 by Werner Jacobs and in 2003 [de] by Tomy Wigand [de].

In 1932 Kästner wrote Der 35. Mai (The 35th of May), which is set in a fantasy land entered via a wardrobe and includes futuristic features such as mobile phones.

Gerhard Lamprecht's film version of Emil und die Detektive (1931) was a great success. Kästner, however, was dissatisfied with the screenplay, and that led him to become a screenwriter for the Babelsberg film studios.

Kästner's only major adult novel, Fabian (Roman) [de], was published in 1931. Kästner included rapid cuts and montages in it, in an attempt to mimic cinematic style. Fabian, an unemployed literary expert, experiences the uproariously fast pace of the times as well as the downfall of the Weimar Republic.

From 1927 until 1931, Kästner lived at Prager Straße 17 (today near no. 12) in Berlin–Wilmersdorf and after that, until February 1945, at Roscherstraße 16 in Berlin-Charlottenburg.

Berlin 1933–1945

Kästner was a pacifist and wrote for children because of his belief in the regenerative powers of youth. He was opposed to the Nazi regime and was one of the signatories to the Urgent Call for Unity. However, unlike many other authors critical of the dictatorship, Kästner did not go into exile. After the Nazis' rise to power, he visited Merano and Switzerland and met with exiled writers, yet he returned to Berlin, arguing that there he would be better able to chronicle events. It is probable that he also wanted to avoid abandoning his mother. His Necessary Answer to Superfluous Questions (Notwendige Antwort auf überflüssige Fragen) in Kurz und Bündig explains Kästner's position:

I'm a German from Dresden in Saxony
My homeland won't let me go
I'm like a tree that, grown in Germany,
Will likely wither there also.

The Gestapo interrogated Kästner several times, the national writers' guild expelled him, and the Nazis burned his books as "contrary to the German spirit" during the book burnings of 10 May 1933, instigated by Joseph Goebbels. Kästner witnessed the event in person and later wrote about it. He was denied membership of the new Nazi-controlled national writers' guild, Reichsverband deutscher Schriftsteller (RDS), because of what its officials called the "culturally Bolshevist attitude in his writings prior to 1933."

During the Third Reich, Kästner published apolitical novels such as Drei Männer im Schnee (Three Men in the Snow) (1934) in Switzerland. In 1942, he received a special exemption to write the screenplay for Münchhausen, using the pseudonym Berthold Bürger. The film was a prestige project by Ufa Studios to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of its establishment, an enterprise backed by Goebbels.

In 1944, Kästner's home in Berlin was destroyed during a bombing raid. In early 1945, he and others pretended that they had to travel to the rural community of Mayrhofen in Tyrol for location shooting for a (non-existent) film, Das falsche Gesicht (The Wrong Face). The actual purpose of the journey was to avoid the final Soviet assault on Berlin. Kästner had also received a warning that the SS planned to kill him and other Nazi opponents before arrival of the Soviets.[7] He was in Mayrhofen when the war ended. He wrote about this period in a diary published in 1961 under the title Notabene 45. Another edition, closer to Kästner's original notes, was published in 2006 under the title Das Blaue Buch (The Blue Book).

Kästner and the bombing of Dresden

In his diary for 1945, published many years later, Kästner describes his shock at arriving in Dresden shortly after the bombing of the city in World War II (February 1945) and finding it as a pile of ruins in which he could recognize none of the streets or landmarks among which he had spent his childhood.

His autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war includes a lament for Dresden (quoted from the English translation, When I Was a Little Boy): "I was born in the most beautiful city in the world. Even if your father, child, was the richest man in the world, he could not take you to see it, because it does not exist any more. ... In a thousand years was her beauty built, in one night was it utterly destroyed."

Munich 1945–1974

After the end of the war, Kästner moved to Munich, where he became culture editor for the Neue Zeitung and publisher of Pinguin [de], a magazine for children and young people. He was also active in literary cabaret, in productions at the Schaubude (1945–1948) and Die kleine Freiheit (after 1951), and in radio. During this time, he wrote a number of skits, songs, audio plays, speeches, and essays about National Socialism, the war years, and the stark realities of life in post-war Germany. Most notable among these works are Marschlied 1945 and Deutsches Ringelspiel. He also continued to write children's books, including Die Konferenz der Tiere [de] (The Animals' Conference), a pacifist satire in which the world's animals unite to successfully force humans to disarm and make peace. This picture book was made into an animated film [de] by Curt Linda. Kästner also renewed his collaboration with Edmund Nick, whom he had met in Leipzig in 1929, when Nick, then Head of the Music Department at Radio Silesia, wrote the music for Kästner's radio play Leben in dieser Zeit. Nick, now the Musical Director at the Schaubude, set more than 60 of Kästner's songs to music.

Kästner's optimism in the immediate post-war era gave way to resignation as Germans in the West attempted to normalize their lives following the economic reforms of the early 1950s and the ensuing "economic miracle" ("Wirtschaftswunder"). He became further disillusioned as Chancellor Konrad Adenauer remilitarized West Germany, made it a member of NATO, and rearmed it for possible military conflict with the Warsaw Pact. Kästner remained a pacifist and spoke out at anti-militarist demonstrations against the nuclear weapons armement of West Germany. Later, he also took firm stand against the Vietnam War. Kästner began to publish less and less, partly because of his increasing alcoholism. He did not join any of the post-war literary movements in West Germany, and in the 1950s and 1960s he came to be perceived mainly as an author of children's books.

His novel Fabian was made into a movie in 1980, as were several of his children's books. The most popular of these adaptations were the two U.S. versions of The Parent Trap, made in 1961 and 1998, and based on his novel Das doppelte Lottchen (Lisa and Lottie). In 1960, Kästner received the Hans Christian Andersen Award for Als ich ein kleiner Junge war, his autobiography.[1][2] The English translation by Florence and Isabel McHugh, published as When I Was a Little Boy in 1959, won the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1961.

 
Erich Kästner (left) in the Englischer Garten, Munich, 1968

Kästner received several other awards, including the Filmband in Gold for best screenplay for the German film version of Das doppelte Lottchen (1950), the literary prize of the city of Munich in 1956, and the Georg Büchner Prize in 1957. The government of West Germany honored Kästner with its order of merit, the Bundesverdienstkreuz (Federal Cross of Merit), in 1959. In 1968 he received the Lessing-Ring [de] together with the literary prize of the German Masonic Order.

In 1951, Kästner was elected President of the PEN Center of West Germany, and he remained in office until 1961. In 1965 he became President Emeritus. He was also instrumental in the founding of the Internationale Jugendbibliothek, a library of children's books, in Munich. In 1953 he was founding member of IBBY (International Board on Books for Young People).

Kästner never married. He wrote his last two children's books, Der kleine Mann and Der kleine Mann und die kleine Miss, for his son Thomas Kästner, who was born in 1957. Kästner frequently read from his works. In the 1920s, he recorded some of his poems of social criticism and in some of the films based on his books he performed as the narrator, as he did for the first audio production of Pünktchen und Anton. Other recordings for Deutsche Grammophon include poems, epigrams, and his version of the folk tale Till Eulenspiegel. He also read in theaters, such as the Cuvilliés Theatre in Munich, and for the radio, for which he read Als ich ein kleiner Junge war and other works.

Kästner died of esophageal cancer on 29 July 1974 in the Neuperlach Hospital in Munich. He was buried in the St. George cemetery in the Bogenhausen district of Munich. Shortly after his death, the Bavarian Academy of Arts established a literary prize in his name. Many streets in Germany[8] and the asteroid 12318 Kästner are named after him.[9]

Works

A list of his works under their German titles, arranged by their German publication dates:

  • Weihnachtslied, chemisch gereinigt, 1927
  • Herz auf Taille, 1928
  • Emil und die Detektive, 1929 (Emil and the Detectives)
  • Lärm im Spiegel [de] 1929
  • Ein Mann gibt Auskunft, 1930
  • Pünktchen und Anton [de], 1931 (Anna Louise and Anton)
  • Der 35. Mai, 1931 (The 35th of May, or Conrad's Ride to the South Seas)
  • Fabian. Die Geschichte eines Moralisten, 1931
  • Gesang zwischen den Stühlen, 1932
  • Emil und die Drei Zwillinge [de] 1933 (Emil and the Three Twins)
  • Das fliegende Klassenzimmer, 1933 (The Flying Classroom)
  • Drei Männer im Schnee [de], 1934 (Three Men in the Snow)
  • Die verschwundene Miniatur [de], 1935 (The Missing Miniature)
  • Doktor Erich Kästners Lyrische Hausapotheke [de], 1936 (Doctor Erich Kästner's Lyrical Medicine Chest)
  • Georg und die Zwischenfälle, (aka Der kleine Grenzverkehr) 1938 (A Salzburg Comedy)
  • Das doppelte Lottchen, 1949 (Lisa and Lottie; republished as The Parent Trap in the United Kingdom and Australia)
  • Die Konferenz der Tiere [de], 1949 (The Animal Congress)
  • Die 13 Monate [de], 1955
  • Als ich ein kleiner Junge war [de] 1957 (When I Was a Little Boy)
  • Das Schwein beim Friseur 1963
  • Der kleine Mann [de] 1963 (The Little Man)
  • Der kleine Mann und die kleine Miss [de] 1967 (The Little Man and the Little Miss)
  • Mein Onkel Franz 1969
  • Sylvia List (Editor): Das große Erich Kästner Buch, with an introduction by Hermann Kesten, Atrium Verlag, Zürich 2002, ISBN 978-3-85535-945-5.

References

  1. ^ a b "Hans Christian Andersen Awards". International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY).
  2. ^ a b "Erich Kästner" by Eva Glistrup, pp. 26–27.
    "Half a Century of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards" by Eva Glistrup, pp. 14–21
    The Hans Christian Andersen Awards, 1956–2002. IBBY. Gyldendal. 2002. Hosted by Austrian Literature Online.
  3. ^ "Erich Kästner". Nomination Database. Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  4. ^ O'Brien, Andrea (2015). "Erich Kästner Museum im Literaturhaus Villa Augustin" [Erich Kästner Museum in the Literaturhaus Villa Augustin]. Erich Kästner Viertel (in German). Retrieved 17 July 2019. Erich Kästner Museum, die Möglichkeit, das ambitionierte Literaturhaus-Projekt im ehemaligen Wohnhaus von Erich Kästners Onkel Franz Augustin zu konzipieren.
  5. ^ Larson, Katherine Sue Gelus (1968). Through the Looking Glass of Erich Kästner: Culture and Crisis in Germany (Thesis). Stanford University, Department of History.
  6. ^ Hanuschek, Sven (1999). Keiner blickt dir hinter das Gesicht. Das Leben Erich Kästners [Nobody looks behind the face. The life of Erich Kästner] (in German). Munich: Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag. p. 46. ISBN 978-3-423-30871-7.
  7. ^ "Lügen als Überlebensstrategie" by Michael Watzke and Claus-Stephan Rehfeld, Deutschlandfunk Kultur, 26 June 2015 (in German)
  8. ^ "Erich-Kästner-Straße" in Germany, Postleitzahlen Deutschland [Postal codes in Germany]
  9. ^ "(12318) Kästner = 1992 HD7", Minor Planet Center

Further reading

  • Volker Ladenthin [de], "Erich Kästner, the Innovator: Modern Books for Modern Kids", Volker Ladenthin and Susanne Hucklenbroich-Ley, ed., Erich Kästner Jahrbuch vol. 3, Würzburg 2004, pp. 19–26

External links

  • Petri Liukkonen. "Erich Kästner". Books and Writers
  • Erich Kästner at IMDb
  • Erich Kästner at Find a Grave
  • Erich Kästner's poems in Hebrew

erich, kästner, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 201. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Erich Kastner news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Emil Erich Kastner German ˈʔeːʁɪc ˈkɛstnɐ listen 23 February 1899 29 July 1974 was a German writer poet screenwriter and satirist known primarily for his humorous socially astute poems and for children s books including Emil and the Detectives He received the international Hans Christian Andersen Medal in 1960 for his autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war de 1 2 He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in six separate years 3 Erich KastnerErich Kastner 1961BornEmil Erich Kastner 1899 02 23 23 February 1899Dresden Kingdom of Saxony German EmpireDied29 July 1974 1974 07 29 aged 75 Munich Bavaria West GermanyOccupationWriterNationalityGermanPeriod1928 1969GenreChildren s literature poetry satire screenplaysNotable awardsHans Christian Andersen Award for Writing 1960PartnerLuiselotte Enderle de ChildrenThomas KastnerSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Dresden 1899 1919 1 2 Leipzig 1919 1927 1 3 Berlin 1927 1933 1 4 Berlin 1933 1945 1 5 Kastner and the bombing of Dresden 1 6 Munich 1945 1974 2 Works 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksBiography EditDresden 1899 1919 Edit Birthplace memorial plaque Kastner was born in Dresden Saxony and grew up on Konigsbrucker Strasse in Dresden s Aussere Neustadt Close by the Erich Kastner Museum was subsequently opened in the Villa Augustin that had belonged to Kastner s uncle Franz Augustin 4 Kastner s father Emil Richard Kastner was a master saddlemaker 5 His mother Ida Amalia nee Augustin had been a maidservant but in her thirties she trained as a hairstylist in order to supplement her husband s income Kastner had a particularly close relationship with his mother When he was living in Leipzig and Berlin he wrote her fairly intimate letters and postcards almost every day and overbearing mothers make regular appearances in his writings It has been rumored that Erich Kastner s natural father was the family s Jewish doctor Emil Zimmermann 1864 1953 but these rumors have never been substantiated 6 Kastner wrote about his childhood in his autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war de 1957 translated as When I Was a Little Boy According to Kastner he did not suffer from being an only child had many friends and was not lonely or overindulged In 1913 Kastner entered a teacher training school in Dresden However he dropped out in 1916 shortly before completing the exams that would have qualified him to teach in state schools He was drafted into the Royal Saxon Army in 1917 and was trained at a heavy artillery unit in Dresden Kastner was not sent to the front but the brutality of the military training he underwent and the death of contemporaries he experienced strongly influenced his later antimilitarism The merciless drilling he was subjected to by his drill sergeant also caused a lifelong heart condition Kastner portrays this in his poem Sergeant Waurich After the end of the war Kastner went back to school and passed the Abitur exam with distinction earning a scholarship from the city of Dresden Leipzig 1919 1927 Edit In the autumn of 1919 Kastner enrolled at the University of Leipzig to study history philosophy German studies and theater His studies took him to Rostock and Berlin and in 1925 he received a doctorate for a thesis on Frederick the Great and German literature He paid for his studies by working as a journalist and critic for a newspaper the Neue Leipziger Zeitung However his increasingly critical reviews and the frivolous publication of his erotic poem Abendlied des Kammervirtuosen Evening Song of the Chamber Virtuoso with illustrations by Erich Ohser led to his dismissal in 1927 That same year he moved to Berlin although he continued to write for the Neue Leipziger Zeitung under the pseudonym Berthold Burger Bert Citizen as a freelance correspondent Kastner later used several other pseudonyms including Melchior Kurtz Peter Flint and Robert Neuner Berlin 1927 1933 Edit Kastner s years in Berlin from 1927 until the end of the Weimar Republic in 1933 were his most productive He published poems newspaper columns articles and reviews in many of Berlin s important periodicals He was a regular contributor to dailies such as the Berliner Tageblatt and the Vossische Zeitung as well as to Die Weltbuhne Hans Sarkowicz and Franz Josef Gortz the editors of his complete works 1998 list over 350 articles written between 1923 and 1933 but he must have written even more since many texts are known to have been lost when Kastner s flat burned down during a bombing raid in February 1944 Kastner published his first book of poems Herz auf Taille in 1928 and by 1933 he had published three more collections His Gebrauchslyrik Lyrics for Everyday Use made him one of the leading figure of the Neue Sachlichkeit movement which focused on using a sobering distant and objective style to satirise contemporary society In the autumn of 1928 he published his best known children s book Emil und die Detektive illustrated by Walter Trier The owner of the Weltbuhne publishing house Edith Jacobsen had suggested the idea of writing a detective story to Kastner The book sold two million copies in Germany alone and has since been translated into 59 languages The novel was unusual in that in contrast to most children s literature of the period it is set in contemporary Berlin and not in a fairy tale world Kastner also refrained from overt moralising letting the characters actions speak for themselves Its sequel Emil und die Drei Zwillinge 1933 Emil and the Three Twins takes place on the shores of the Baltic The Emil books may have influenced the creation of other books in the subgenre of literature about child detectives Emil und die Detektive has been adapted for the cinema five times three of them in Germany in 1931 1935 UK 1954 1964 USA and 2001 Kastner followed this success with Punktchen und Anton 1931 and Das fliegende Klassenzimmer 1933 Walter Trier s illustration significantly contributed to the books overwhelming popularity Das fliegende Klassenzimmer has been adapted for the cinema several times in 1954 by Kurt Hoffmann in 1973 by Werner Jacobs and in 2003 de by Tomy Wigand de In 1932 Kastner wrote Der 35 Mai The 35th of May which is set in a fantasy land entered via a wardrobe and includes futuristic features such as mobile phones Gerhard Lamprecht s film version of Emil und die Detektive 1931 was a great success Kastner however was dissatisfied with the screenplay and that led him to become a screenwriter for the Babelsberg film studios Kastner s only major adult novel Fabian Roman de was published in 1931 Kastner included rapid cuts and montages in it in an attempt to mimic cinematic style Fabian an unemployed literary expert experiences the uproariously fast pace of the times as well as the downfall of the Weimar Republic From 1927 until 1931 Kastner lived at Prager Strasse 17 today near no 12 in Berlin Wilmersdorf and after that until February 1945 at Roscherstrasse 16 in Berlin Charlottenburg Berlin 1933 1945 Edit Kastner was a pacifist and wrote for children because of his belief in the regenerative powers of youth He was opposed to the Nazi regime and was one of the signatories to the Urgent Call for Unity However unlike many other authors critical of the dictatorship Kastner did not go into exile After the Nazis rise to power he visited Merano and Switzerland and met with exiled writers yet he returned to Berlin arguing that there he would be better able to chronicle events It is probable that he also wanted to avoid abandoning his mother His Necessary Answer to Superfluous Questions Notwendige Antwort auf uberflussige Fragen in Kurz und Bundig explains Kastner s position I m a German from Dresden in Saxony My homeland won t let me go I m like a tree that grown in Germany Will likely wither there also The Gestapo interrogated Kastner several times the national writers guild expelled him and the Nazis burned his books as contrary to the German spirit during the book burnings of 10 May 1933 instigated by Joseph Goebbels Kastner witnessed the event in person and later wrote about it He was denied membership of the new Nazi controlled national writers guild Reichsverband deutscher Schriftsteller RDS because of what its officials called the culturally Bolshevist attitude in his writings prior to 1933 During the Third Reich Kastner published apolitical novels such as Drei Manner im Schnee Three Men in the Snow 1934 in Switzerland In 1942 he received a special exemption to write the screenplay for Munchhausen using the pseudonym Berthold Burger The film was a prestige project by Ufa Studios to celebrate the twenty fifth anniversary of its establishment an enterprise backed by Goebbels In 1944 Kastner s home in Berlin was destroyed during a bombing raid In early 1945 he and others pretended that they had to travel to the rural community of Mayrhofen in Tyrol for location shooting for a non existent film Das falsche Gesicht The Wrong Face The actual purpose of the journey was to avoid the final Soviet assault on Berlin Kastner had also received a warning that the SS planned to kill him and other Nazi opponents before arrival of the Soviets 7 He was in Mayrhofen when the war ended He wrote about this period in a diary published in 1961 under the title Notabene 45 Another edition closer to Kastner s original notes was published in 2006 under the title Das Blaue Buch The Blue Book Kastner and the bombing of Dresden Edit In his diary for 1945 published many years later Kastner describes his shock at arriving in Dresden shortly after the bombing of the city in World War II February 1945 and finding it as a pile of ruins in which he could recognize none of the streets or landmarks among which he had spent his childhood His autobiography Als ich ein kleiner Junge war includes a lament for Dresden quoted from the English translation When I Was a Little Boy I was born in the most beautiful city in the world Even if your father child was the richest man in the world he could not take you to see it because it does not exist any more In a thousand years was her beauty built in one night was it utterly destroyed Munich 1945 1974 Edit After the end of the war Kastner moved to Munich where he became culture editor for the Neue Zeitung and publisher of Pinguin de a magazine for children and young people He was also active in literary cabaret in productions at the Schaubude 1945 1948 and Die kleine Freiheit after 1951 and in radio During this time he wrote a number of skits songs audio plays speeches and essays about National Socialism the war years and the stark realities of life in post war Germany Most notable among these works are Marschlied 1945 and Deutsches Ringelspiel He also continued to write children s books including Die Konferenz der Tiere de The Animals Conference a pacifist satire in which the world s animals unite to successfully force humans to disarm and make peace This picture book was made into an animated film de by Curt Linda Kastner also renewed his collaboration with Edmund Nick whom he had met in Leipzig in 1929 when Nick then Head of the Music Department at Radio Silesia wrote the music for Kastner s radio play Leben in dieser Zeit Nick now the Musical Director at the Schaubude set more than 60 of Kastner s songs to music Kastner s optimism in the immediate post war era gave way to resignation as Germans in the West attempted to normalize their lives following the economic reforms of the early 1950s and the ensuing economic miracle Wirtschaftswunder He became further disillusioned as Chancellor Konrad Adenauer remilitarized West Germany made it a member of NATO and rearmed it for possible military conflict with the Warsaw Pact Kastner remained a pacifist and spoke out at anti militarist demonstrations against the nuclear weapons armement of West Germany Later he also took firm stand against the Vietnam War Kastner began to publish less and less partly because of his increasing alcoholism He did not join any of the post war literary movements in West Germany and in the 1950s and 1960s he came to be perceived mainly as an author of children s books His novel Fabian was made into a movie in 1980 as were several of his children s books The most popular of these adaptations were the two U S versions of The Parent Trap made in 1961 and 1998 and based on his novel Das doppelte Lottchen Lisa and Lottie In 1960 Kastner received the Hans Christian Andersen Award for Als ich ein kleiner Junge war his autobiography 1 2 The English translation by Florence and Isabel McHugh published as When I Was a Little Boy in 1959 won the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1961 Erich Kastner left in the Englischer Garten Munich 1968 Kastner received several other awards including the Filmband in Gold for best screenplay for the German film version of Das doppelte Lottchen 1950 the literary prize of the city of Munich in 1956 and the Georg Buchner Prize in 1957 The government of West Germany honored Kastner with its order of merit the Bundesverdienstkreuz Federal Cross of Merit in 1959 In 1968 he received the Lessing Ring de together with the literary prize of the German Masonic Order In 1951 Kastner was elected President of the PEN Center of West Germany and he remained in office until 1961 In 1965 he became President Emeritus He was also instrumental in the founding of the Internationale Jugendbibliothek a library of children s books in Munich In 1953 he was founding member of IBBY International Board on Books for Young People Kastner never married He wrote his last two children s books Der kleine Mann and Der kleine Mann und die kleine Miss for his son Thomas Kastner who was born in 1957 Kastner frequently read from his works In the 1920s he recorded some of his poems of social criticism and in some of the films based on his books he performed as the narrator as he did for the first audio production of Punktchen und Anton Other recordings for Deutsche Grammophon include poems epigrams and his version of the folk tale Till Eulenspiegel He also read in theaters such as the Cuvillies Theatre in Munich and for the radio for which he read Als ich ein kleiner Junge war and other works Kastner died of esophageal cancer on 29 July 1974 in the Neuperlach Hospital in Munich He was buried in the St George cemetery in the Bogenhausen district of Munich Shortly after his death the Bavarian Academy of Arts established a literary prize in his name Many streets in Germany 8 and the asteroid 12318 Kastner are named after him 9 Works EditA list of his works under their German titles arranged by their German publication dates Weihnachtslied chemisch gereinigt 1927 Herz auf Taille 1928 Emil und die Detektive 1929 Emil and the Detectives Larm im Spiegel de 1929 Ein Mann gibt Auskunft 1930 Punktchen und Anton de 1931 Anna Louise and Anton Der 35 Mai 1931 The 35th of May or Conrad s Ride to the South Seas Fabian Die Geschichte eines Moralisten 1931 Gesang zwischen den Stuhlen 1932 Emil und die Drei Zwillinge de 1933 Emil and the Three Twins Das fliegende Klassenzimmer 1933 The Flying Classroom Drei Manner im Schnee de 1934 Three Men in the Snow Die verschwundene Miniatur de 1935 The Missing Miniature Doktor Erich Kastners Lyrische Hausapotheke de 1936 Doctor Erich Kastner s Lyrical Medicine Chest Georg und die Zwischenfalle aka Der kleine Grenzverkehr 1938 A Salzburg Comedy Das doppelte Lottchen 1949 Lisa and Lottie republished as The Parent Trap in the United Kingdom and Australia Die Konferenz der Tiere de 1949 The Animal Congress Die 13 Monate de 1955 Als ich ein kleiner Junge war de 1957 When I Was a Little Boy Das Schwein beim Friseur 1963 Der kleine Mann de 1963 The Little Man Der kleine Mann und die kleine Miss de 1967 The Little Man and the Little Miss Mein Onkel Franz 1969 Sylvia List Editor Das grosse Erich Kastner Buch with an introduction by Hermann Kesten Atrium Verlag Zurich 2002 ISBN 978 3 85535 945 5 References Edit a b Hans Christian Andersen Awards International Board on Books for Young People IBBY a b Erich Kastner by Eva Glistrup pp 26 27 Half a Century of the Hans Christian Andersen Awards by Eva Glistrup pp 14 21The Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956 2002 IBBY Gyldendal 2002 Hosted by Austrian Literature Online Erich Kastner Nomination Database Nobel Foundation Retrieved 19 April 2017 O Brien Andrea 2015 Erich Kastner Museum im Literaturhaus Villa Augustin Erich Kastner Museum in the Literaturhaus Villa Augustin Erich Kastner Viertel in German Retrieved 17 July 2019 Erich Kastner Museum die Moglichkeit das ambitionierte Literaturhaus Projekt im ehemaligen Wohnhaus von Erich Kastners Onkel Franz Augustin zu konzipieren Larson Katherine Sue Gelus 1968 Through the Looking Glass of Erich Kastner Culture and Crisis in Germany Thesis Stanford University Department of History Hanuschek Sven 1999 Keiner blickt dir hinter das Gesicht Das Leben Erich Kastners Nobody looks behind the face The life of Erich Kastner in German Munich Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag p 46 ISBN 978 3 423 30871 7 Lugen als Uberlebensstrategie by Michael Watzke and Claus Stephan Rehfeld Deutschlandfunk Kultur 26 June 2015 in German Erich Kastner Strasse in Germany Postleitzahlen Deutschland Postal codes in Germany 12318 Kastner 1992 HD7 Minor Planet CenterFurther reading EditVolker Ladenthin de Erich Kastner the Innovator Modern Books for Modern Kids Volker Ladenthin and Susanne Hucklenbroich Ley ed Erich Kastner Jahrbuch vol 3 Wurzburg 2004 pp 19 26External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Erich Kastner Petri Liukkonen Erich Kastner Books and Writers Erich Kastner at IMDb Erich Kastner at Find a Grave Erich Kastner s poems in Hebrew Portals Biography Children s literature Film Germany Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erich Kastner amp oldid 1152236415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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