fbpx
Wikipedia

Walter von Molo

Walter Ritter/Reichsritter von Molo (14 June 1880 – 27 October 1958) was an Austrian writer in the German language.

Walter von Molo, 1930

Life edit

Walter von Molo was born on 14 June 1880 in Šternberk, Moravia – then in Austria-Hungary, now in the Czech Republic. He spent his youth in Vienna, the capital. At the Technical University of Vienna he studied mechanical and electrical engineering; he married his first wife, Rosa Richter, in 1906, had a son and daughter, and worked until 1913 as an engineer in the Viennese Patent Office. Shortly before the outbreak of the World War I he moved to Berlin to be with his Bavarian parents and rediscover his German roots, just as Berlin was transforming itself into a cultural capital. It was there that he embarked upon his career as a writer.

His first works, published during and shortly after the war, were bestsellers, and he quickly became one of the most popular of all German-speaking authors of the first half of the century. The books included biographies of Friedrich Schiller, Frederick the Great, and Prince Eugen, as well as novels such as Ein Volk wacht auf ("A People Awakes", 1918–21). All were strongly marked by German nationalism.

In 1925 he divorced Rosa, and five years later married Annemarie Mummenhoff.

Molo was a founding member of the German PEN Club, and also, in 1926, of the Prussian Academy of Arts. From 1928 to 1930 he was chairman of the poetry section.

Although von Molo, a pacifist, had no Jewish forebears, he defended the Jews of Germany and Austria, and with the rise of Nazism he repeatedly drew the anger of anti-Semitic organizations.[1] Molo remained a member of the academy after its purging of Jewish members, and on 15 March 1933 he signed a declaration pledging loyalty to the Nazi leaders. In October he was one of the 88 German writers who went so far as to subscribe to the Vow of Most Faithful Allegiance (Gelöbnis treuester Gefolgschaft) to Adolf Hitler. This was the same year that his two children left Germany. (Conrad returned in 1940; Trude did not.) In 1936 Molo wrote the screenplay for the film Fridericus, based on his novel of 1918. During the World War II he wrote articles for the Nazi-controlled newspaper Krakauer Zeitung published in occupied Kraków.

Although Molo's biography of Frederick II of Prussia was praised by the Nazis, he nevertheless came under attack as unvölkisch, ein Judenfreund and Pazifist (he had, for example, effusively praised the work of Erich Maria Remarque), and there were attempts to push him from public life, with the banning of plays, and the suppression of certain books and their removal from libraries. In 1934, to avoid the public spotlight, he resigned from all the learned societies (except the Goethe Society) and moved to Murnau am Staffelsee, where he had bought property two years before. The idea of exile from Germany itself was unthinkable to him. House searches and defamatory articles continued, and in August 1939 he was denaturalised. However, he was co-writer of the movie script The Endless Road. As a result of the harassment, he destroyed, with the help of his second wife Anne Marie, a large part of his private library, including correspondence with Stefan Zweig, books by Thomas and Heinrich Mann bearing personal dedications, and many papers of his colleagues. All this potentially incriminating material ended up at the bottom of his garden pond. He was never placed under "protective custody" (Schutzhaft) as others were.

After the war he would become a bitter critic of the authors who had fled Germany. On 4 August 1945 an open letter from Molo to Thomas Mann, begging him to return from the United States, was published in the Hessischen Post and other newspapers both in Germany and abroad: "Your people, hungering and suffering for a third of a century, has in its innermost core nothing in common with all the misdeeds and crimes, the shameful horrors and lies...." His sentiments were echoed by Frank Thiess, whose own piece would popularise the use of the phrase innere Emigration to describe the choice of some intellectuals to remain in Germany, a phrase Mann himself had used in 1933. Mann responded, on 28 September, in a statement which caused general indignation in Germany, that new books "published in Germany between 1933 and 1945, can be called less than worthless", that exile had been a sacrifice and not an evasion, and that the nation as a whole did bear responsibility for atrocities committed by its leaders.[2]

This unleashed a huge controversy between the exiled authors and the ones who had chosen to remain. Molo claimed that writers who had abandoned Germany forfeited the right to shape its future.

Despite his appointment as honorary chairman of the German Society of Authors, he did not regain his former prominence. He died on 27 October 1958, and his remains were interred in what is now Molo Park in Murnau. Rosa died in 1970, and Annemarie in 1983.

Works edit

Stories and novels edit

  • Klaus Tiedmann der Kaufmann, 1909
  • Ums Menschentum. Ein Schillerroman, 1912
  • Im Titanenkampf. Ein Schillerroman, 1913
  • Der Hochzeitsjunker. Ein Rennroman, 1913
  • Die Freiheit. Ein Schillerroman, 1914
  • Den Sternen zu. Ein Schillerroman, 1916
  • Der Große Fritz im Krieg, 1917
  • Schiller in Leipzig, 1917
  • Die ewige Tragikomödie. Novellistische Studien 1906-1912, 1917
  • Fridericus, novel, 1918
  • Luise, novel, 1919
  • Auf der rollenden Erde, novel, 1923
  • Vom alten Fritz. 4 Erzählungen aus dem Leben des großen Königs, 1924
  • Bodenmatz, novel, 1925
  • Im ewigen Licht, novel, 1926
  • Die Legende vom Herrn, 1927
  • Hans Amrung und seine Frau und andere Novellen, 1927
  • Mensch Luther, novel, 1928
  • Die Scheidung. Ein Roman unserer Zeit, 1929
  • Ein Deutscher ohne Deutschland. Ein Friedrich List-Roman, 1931
  • Holunder in Polen, novel, 1933
  • Der kleine Held, novel, 1934
  • Eugenio von Savoy. Heimlicher Kaiser des Reichs, novel, 1936
  • Geschichte einer Seele, 1938
  • Das kluge Mädchen, novel, 1940
  • Der Feldmarschall, 1940
  • Sie sollen nur des Gesetzes spotten, stories, 1943
  • Im Sommer. Eine Lebenssonate, 2 Erzählungen, 1943
  • Der Menschenfreund, novel, 1948
  • Die Affen Gottes. Roman der Zeit, 1950

Plays edit

  • Das gelebte Leben, drama in 4 acts, 1911
  • Die Mutter, drama in 4 acts, 1914
  • Der Infant der Menschheit, drama in 3 acts, 1916
  • Die Erlösung der Ethel, tragedy in 4 acts, 1917
  • Friedrich Staps. Ein deutsches Volksstück in 4 Aufzügen, 1918
  • Der Hauch im All, tragedy in 3 acts, 1918
  • Die helle Nacht, play in 3 acts, 1920
  • Till Lausebums, romantic comedy in 3 acts, 1921
  • Lebensballade, a play in 12 scenes, 1924
  • Ordnung im Chaos, play in 8 tableaux, 1928
  • Friedrich List. Ein deutsches Prophetenleben in 3 Aufzügen, 1934

Screenplays edit

Other writings edit

  • Deutsches Volk. Ein Flugblatt in jedes Haus, 1914
  • Als ich die bunte Mütze trug. Deutsch-österreichische Studenten-Erinnerungen, 1914
  • An unsere Seelen. Drei Flugblätter auf das Kriegsjahr 1914-1915, 1915
  • Deutschland und Oesterreich. Kriegsaufsätze, 1915
  • Deutsch sein heißt Mensch sein! Notschrei aus deutscher Seele, 1915
  • An Frederik van Eeden und Romain Rolland. Offener Brief, 1915
  • Sprüche der Seele, 1916
  • Im Schritt der Jahrhunderte. Geschichtliche Bilder, 1917
  • Italien. Erlebnisse Deutscher in Italien, 1921
  • Im Zwielicht der Zeit. Bilder aus unseren Tagen, 1922
  • Der deutschen Jugend gesagt, 1929
  • Zwischen Tag und Traum. Gesammelte Reden und Aufsätze, 1930
  • Deutsche Volksgemeinschaft. Ansprache am 22. März 1932 in Weimar, 1932
  • Wie ich Deutschland möchte. Eine Rede über Friedrich List, 1932
  • Lob des Leides, 1947
  • Zu neuem Tag. Ein Lebensbericht, 1950
  • So wunderbar ist das Leben. Erinnerungen und Begegnungen, 1957
  • Wo ich Frieden fand. Erlebnisse und Erinnerungen, 1959

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Arndt Kremer: Deutsche Juden, deutsche Sprache. Jüdische und judenfeindliche Sprachkonzepte und -konflikte 1893–1933, Berlin 2007, p. 105.
  2. ^ Stephen Brockmann. German literary culture at the zero hour. Camden House, Rochester, 2004.

References edit

  • Werner von Berge: Der lange Weg aus dem Exil. Die Diskussion um die Heimkehr aus dem Exil am Beispiel Thomas Manns und des Streites zwischen "innerer" und "äußerer" Emigration. 1945-1949. Magisterarbeit, Universität Frankfurt am Main 1984
  • Babette Dietrich: "Ein Auftrag von höherer Macht ...". Walter von Molo und die Mainzer Literaturklasse 1949-1956. (= Edition Wissenschaft; Reihe Germanistik; 7). Tectum-Verlag, Marburg 1995, ISBN 3-89608-877-7
  • Hanns Martin Elster: Walter von Molo und sein Schaffen. Langen, München 1920
  • Franz Camillo Munck: Walter von Molo. Der Dichter und das Leben. (= Vom Herzschlag meines Volkes; 2). Koch, Leipzig 1924
  • Gustav Christian Rassy: Walter von Molo. Ein Dichter des deutschen Menschen. Bohn, Leipzig 1936
  • Karl O. Vitense: Walter von Molo. Das Wesen des Schriftstellers. Dissertation, Universität Leipzig 1936

External links edit

  • Walter von Molo in the German National Library catalogue
  • Eintrag zu Walter von Molo im Projekt Historischer Roman (Datenbank der Universität Innsbruck)
  • Eintrag zu Walter von Molo bei filmportal.de
  • Works by Walter von Molo at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Walter von Molo at Internet Archive
  • Walter von Molo at IMDb
  • Molo Park

walter, molo, walter, ritter, reichsritter, molo, june, 1880, october, 1958, austrian, writer, german, language, 1930, contents, life, works, stories, novels, plays, screenplays, other, writings, also, notes, references, external, linkslife, edit, born, june, . Walter Ritter Reichsritter von Molo 14 June 1880 27 October 1958 was an Austrian writer in the German language Walter von Molo 1930 Contents 1 Life 2 Works 2 1 Stories and novels 2 2 Plays 2 3 Screenplays 2 4 Other writings 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksLife editWalter von Molo was born on 14 June 1880 in Sternberk Moravia then in Austria Hungary now in the Czech Republic He spent his youth in Vienna the capital At the Technical University of Vienna he studied mechanical and electrical engineering he married his first wife Rosa Richter in 1906 had a son and daughter and worked until 1913 as an engineer in the Viennese Patent Office Shortly before the outbreak of the World War I he moved to Berlin to be with his Bavarian parents and rediscover his German roots just as Berlin was transforming itself into a cultural capital It was there that he embarked upon his career as a writer His first works published during and shortly after the war were bestsellers and he quickly became one of the most popular of all German speaking authors of the first half of the century The books included biographies of Friedrich Schiller Frederick the Great and Prince Eugen as well as novels such as Ein Volk wacht auf A People Awakes 1918 21 All were strongly marked by German nationalism In 1925 he divorced Rosa and five years later married Annemarie Mummenhoff Molo was a founding member of the German PEN Club and also in 1926 of the Prussian Academy of Arts From 1928 to 1930 he was chairman of the poetry section Although von Molo a pacifist had no Jewish forebears he defended the Jews of Germany and Austria and with the rise of Nazism he repeatedly drew the anger of anti Semitic organizations 1 Molo remained a member of the academy after its purging of Jewish members and on 15 March 1933 he signed a declaration pledging loyalty to the Nazi leaders In October he was one of the 88 German writers who went so far as to subscribe to the Vow of Most Faithful Allegiance Gelobnis treuester Gefolgschaft to Adolf Hitler This was the same year that his two children left Germany Conrad returned in 1940 Trude did not In 1936 Molo wrote the screenplay for the film Fridericus based on his novel of 1918 During the World War II he wrote articles for the Nazi controlled newspaper Krakauer Zeitung published in occupied Krakow Although Molo s biography of Frederick II of Prussia was praised by the Nazis he nevertheless came under attack as unvolkisch ein Judenfreund and Pazifist he had for example effusively praised the work of Erich Maria Remarque and there were attempts to push him from public life with the banning of plays and the suppression of certain books and their removal from libraries In 1934 to avoid the public spotlight he resigned from all the learned societies except the Goethe Society and moved to Murnau am Staffelsee where he had bought property two years before The idea of exile from Germany itself was unthinkable to him House searches and defamatory articles continued and in August 1939 he was denaturalised However he was co writer of the movie script The Endless Road As a result of the harassment he destroyed with the help of his second wife Anne Marie a large part of his private library including correspondence with Stefan Zweig books by Thomas and Heinrich Mann bearing personal dedications and many papers of his colleagues All this potentially incriminating material ended up at the bottom of his garden pond He was never placed under protective custody Schutzhaft as others were After the war he would become a bitter critic of the authors who had fled Germany On 4 August 1945 an open letter from Molo to Thomas Mann begging him to return from the United States was published in the Hessischen Post and other newspapers both in Germany and abroad Your people hungering and suffering for a third of a century has in its innermost core nothing in common with all the misdeeds and crimes the shameful horrors and lies His sentiments were echoed by Frank Thiess whose own piece would popularise the use of the phrase innere Emigration to describe the choice of some intellectuals to remain in Germany a phrase Mann himself had used in 1933 Mann responded on 28 September in a statement which caused general indignation in Germany that new books published in Germany between 1933 and 1945 can be called less than worthless that exile had been a sacrifice and not an evasion and that the nation as a whole did bear responsibility for atrocities committed by its leaders 2 This unleashed a huge controversy between the exiled authors and the ones who had chosen to remain Molo claimed that writers who had abandoned Germany forfeited the right to shape its future Despite his appointment as honorary chairman of the German Society of Authors he did not regain his former prominence He died on 27 October 1958 and his remains were interred in what is now Molo Park in Murnau Rosa died in 1970 and Annemarie in 1983 Works editStories and novels edit Klaus Tiedmann der Kaufmann 1909 Ums Menschentum Ein Schillerroman 1912 Im Titanenkampf Ein Schillerroman 1913 Der Hochzeitsjunker Ein Rennroman 1913 Die Freiheit Ein Schillerroman 1914 Den Sternen zu Ein Schillerroman 1916 Der Grosse Fritz im Krieg 1917 Schiller in Leipzig 1917 Die ewige Tragikomodie Novellistische Studien 1906 1912 1917 Fridericus novel 1918 Luise novel 1919 Auf der rollenden Erde novel 1923 Vom alten Fritz 4 Erzahlungen aus dem Leben des grossen Konigs 1924 Bodenmatz novel 1925 Im ewigen Licht novel 1926 Die Legende vom Herrn 1927 Hans Amrung und seine Frau und andere Novellen 1927 Mensch Luther novel 1928 Die Scheidung Ein Roman unserer Zeit 1929 Ein Deutscher ohne Deutschland Ein Friedrich List Roman 1931 Holunder in Polen novel 1933 Der kleine Held novel 1934 Eugenio von Savoy Heimlicher Kaiser des Reichs novel 1936 Geschichte einer Seele 1938 Das kluge Madchen novel 1940 Der Feldmarschall 1940 Sie sollen nur des Gesetzes spotten stories 1943 Im Sommer Eine Lebenssonate 2 Erzahlungen 1943 Der Menschenfreund novel 1948 Die Affen Gottes Roman der Zeit 1950 Plays edit Das gelebte Leben drama in 4 acts 1911 Die Mutter drama in 4 acts 1914 Der Infant der Menschheit drama in 3 acts 1916 Die Erlosung der Ethel tragedy in 4 acts 1917 Friedrich Staps Ein deutsches Volksstuck in 4 Aufzugen 1918 Der Hauch im All tragedy in 3 acts 1918 Die helle Nacht play in 3 acts 1920 Till Lausebums romantic comedy in 3 acts 1921 Lebensballade a play in 12 scenes 1924 Ordnung im Chaos play in 8 tableaux 1928 Friedrich List Ein deutsches Prophetenleben in 3 Aufzugen 1934 Screenplays edit Fridericus D 1936 directed by Johannes Meyer with Otto Gebuhr Lil Dagover Hilde Korber Agnes Straub Kathe Haack and others The Endless Road D 1942 43 directed by Hans Schweikart with Eugen Klopfer Eva Immermann Hedwig Wangel Alice Treff and othersOther writings edit Deutsches Volk Ein Flugblatt in jedes Haus 1914 Als ich die bunte Mutze trug Deutsch osterreichische Studenten Erinnerungen 1914 An unsere Seelen Drei Flugblatter auf das Kriegsjahr 1914 1915 1915 Deutschland und Oesterreich Kriegsaufsatze 1915 Deutsch sein heisst Mensch sein Notschrei aus deutscher Seele 1915 An Frederik van Eeden und Romain Rolland Offener Brief 1915 Spruche der Seele 1916 Im Schritt der Jahrhunderte Geschichtliche Bilder 1917 Italien Erlebnisse Deutscher in Italien 1921 Im Zwielicht der Zeit Bilder aus unseren Tagen 1922 Der deutschen Jugend gesagt 1929 Zwischen Tag und Traum Gesammelte Reden und Aufsatze 1930 Deutsche Volksgemeinschaft Ansprache am 22 Marz 1932 in Weimar 1932 Wie ich Deutschland mochte Eine Rede uber Friedrich List 1932 Lob des Leides 1947 Zu neuem Tag Ein Lebensbericht 1950 So wunderbar ist das Leben Erinnerungen und Begegnungen 1957 Wo ich Frieden fand Erlebnisse und Erinnerungen 1959See also editGottfried Benn Thomas Mann Frank ThiessNotes edit Arndt Kremer Deutsche Juden deutsche Sprache Judische und judenfeindliche Sprachkonzepte und konflikte 1893 1933 Berlin 2007 p 105 Stephen Brockmann German literary culture at the zero hour Camden House Rochester 2004 References editWerner von Berge Der lange Weg aus dem Exil Die Diskussion um die Heimkehr aus dem Exil am Beispiel Thomas Manns und des Streites zwischen innerer und ausserer Emigration 1945 1949 Magisterarbeit Universitat Frankfurt am Main 1984 Babette Dietrich Ein Auftrag von hoherer Macht Walter von Molo und die Mainzer Literaturklasse 1949 1956 Edition Wissenschaft Reihe Germanistik 7 Tectum Verlag Marburg 1995 ISBN 3 89608 877 7 Hanns Martin Elster Walter von Molo und sein Schaffen Langen Munchen 1920 Franz Camillo Munck Walter von Molo Der Dichter und das Leben Vom Herzschlag meines Volkes 2 Koch Leipzig 1924 Gustav Christian Rassy Walter von Molo Ein Dichter des deutschen Menschen Bohn Leipzig 1936 Karl O Vitense Walter von Molo Das Wesen des Schriftstellers Dissertation Universitat Leipzig 1936External links editWalter von Molo in the German National Library catalogue Eintrag zu Walter von Molo im Projekt Historischer Roman Datenbank der Universitat Innsbruck Eintrag zu Walter von Molo bei filmportal de Works by Walter von Molo at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Walter von Molo at Internet Archive Walter von Molo at IMDb Molo Park Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter von Molo amp oldid 1216644486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.