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Uwe Johnson

 

Johnson, Uwe (Kammin, Pomerania, 1934-84, Sheerness, Kent), spent his youth in Mecklenburg, was a student at Rostock and Leipzig universities, but broke off his studies without graduating. Publication of his first novel, Ingrid Babendererde, was forbidden by the East German authorities unless alterations were made and it was not published until 1985. Knowing that his next novel would also be unacceptable in East Germany, Johnson emigrated in 1959 to West Berlin. He spent the years 1966-8 in New York. His first published novel, the experimental Mutmaßungen über Jakob (1959), is deeply concerned with the division of Germany, focusing largely on the contradictions of the East German state (see Deutsche Demokratische Republik) and probing problems of communication and identity. The same themes are common to Das dritte Buch über Achim (1961) and Zwei Ansichten (1965).

Johnson's experimentalism is renewed in Jahrestage. Aus dem Leben der Gesine Cresspahl (vols. 1-3, 1970-3), a monumental sequel to Mutmaßungen über Jakob, which transfers the scene to the USA and retrospectively surveys Germany from the 1920s to the 1960s. Eine Reise nach Klagenfurt (1974), on Johnson's exploratory visit to the native city of Ingeborg Bachmann, was followed by Skizze eines Verunglückten (1981) which is set in the USA. In 1980 Johnson published Jahrestage. Zwei Kapitel aus der letzten Lieferung (in Text+Kritik, Heft 65/66) and explained in Begleit-umstände. Frankfurter Vorlesungen (1980) why the book was to remain unfinished. He nevertheless completed the Jahrestage tetralogy with the appearance of Jahrestage 4. Aus dem Leben der Gesine Cresspahl (20 June to 20 August 1968) in 1983. Begleitumstände presents a record of Johnson's work as a visiting professor of Aesthetics (Gastdozent für Poetik) at Frankfurt University in 1979. Apart from views expressed on professional issues, it proffers interesting comments on his approach to his own works. Johnson's style is remarkable for its free syntax, its meticulous precision, its discreet irony, and its quality of control. He is also the author of Karsch und andere Prosa (1964). Berliner Sachen (1975) is a collection of essays. Johnson was awarded the Büchner Prize in 1971. Four volumes published in the series ‘Schriften des Uwe-Johnson-Archivs’ appeared in 1992: Für wenn ich tot bin, ed. S. Unseld and E. Fahlke, Bilderbuch von Johnsons Jerichow und Umgebung, ed. P. Nöldechen, Entwöhnung von einem Arbeitsplatz, ed. B. Neumann, and Wo ist der Erzähler auffindbar?, ed. B. Neumann.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Uwe Johnson
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Johnson, Uwe (ü'vā yôn'zôn), 1934-84, German novelist. Johnson's works explore the complex effects on the average person of the postwar division of Germany, both halves of which he sees as zones of moral poverty. His best-known novels include Mutmassungen über Jakob (1959; tr. Speculations about Jacob, 1963) and Das dritte Buch über Achim (1961; tr. The Third Book about Achim, 1966). In Jahrestage (1970-74, tr. Anniversaries, 1975) he relates his sense of the failure of liberalism in the U.S. in the 1960s to its failure in Germany in the 1930s.

Bibliography

See biography by M. Boulby (1974).

Wikipedia: Uwe Johnson
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Uwe Johnson (German pronunciation: [ˈuːvə ˈjoːnzɔn]) (July 20, 1934 - February 22, 1984) was a German writer, editor, and scholar.

Contents

Life

Johnson was born in Kammin in Pomerania (now Kamień Pomorski, Poland). At the end of World War II in 1945, he fled with his family to Anklam (West Pomerania); his father died in a Soviet internment camp (Fünfeichen). The family eventually settled in Güstrow, where he attended John-Brinckman-Oberschule 1948–1952. He went on to study German philology, first in Rostock (1952-54), then in Leipzig (1954-56). His Diplomarbeit (final thesis) was on Ernst Barlach. Due to his lack of political support for the Communist regime of East Germany, he was suspended from the University June 17, 1953, but was later reinstated.

Beginning in 1953, Johnson worked on the novel Ingrid Babendererde, rejected by various publishing houses and unpublished during his lifetime.

In 1956, Johnson's mother left for West Berlin. As a result, he was not allowed to work a normal job in the East. Unemployed for political reasons, he translated Herman Melville's Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile (the translation was published in 1961) and began to write the novel Mutmassungen über Jakob, published in 1959 by Suhrkamp in Frankfurt am Main. Johnson himself moved to West Berlin at this time. He promptly became associated with Gruppe 47, which Hans Magnus Enzensberger once described as "the Central Café of a literature without a capital." [1]

During the early 1960s, Johnson continued to write and publish fiction, and also supported himself as a translator, mainly from English-language works, and as an editor. He travelled to America in 1961; the following year he was married, had a daughter, received a scholarship to Villa Massimo, Rome, and won the International Publishers' Formentor Prize.

1964 - for the Berliner Tagesspiegel, Reviews of GDR television programmes boycotted by the West German press (published under the title "Der 5. Kanal", "The Fifth Channel", 1987).

In 1965, Johnson travelled again to America. He then edited Bertolt Brecht's Me-ti. Buch der Wendungen. Fragmente 1933-1956 (Me-ti: the Book of Changes. Fragments, 1933-1956). From 1966 through 1968 he worked in New York City as a textbook editor at Harcourt, Brace & World. During this time (in 1967) he began work on his magnum opus, the Jahrestage and edited Das neue Fenster (The new window), a textbook of German-language readings for English-speaking students learning German.

On January 1, 1967 protesters from Johnson's own West Berlin apartment building founded Kommune 1. He first learned about it by reading it in the newspaper. Returning to West Berlin in 1969, he became a member of the West German PEN Center and of the Akademie der Künste (Academy of the Arts). In 1970, he published the first volume of his Jahrestage (Anniversaries). Two more volumes were to follow in the next three years, but the fourth volume would not appear until 1983.

Meanwhile, in 1972 Johnson became Vice President of the Academy of the Arts and was the editor of Max Frisch's Tagebuch 1966-1971. In 1974, he moved to Sheerness on the English Isle of Sheppey; shortly after, he broke off work on Jahrestage due partly to health problems and partly to writer's block.

This was not a completely unproductive period. Johnson published some shorter works and continued to do some work as an editor. In 1977, he was admitted to the Darmstädter Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung (Darmstadt Academy for Speech and Writing); two years later he informally withdrew. In 1979 he gave a series of Lectures on poetics at the University of Frankfurt (published posthumously as Begleitumstände. Frankfurter Vorlesungen).

In 1983, the fourth volume of Jahrestage was published, but Johnson broke off a reading tour for health reasons. He died February 22, 1984 in Sheerness in England. His body was not found until March 13 of the same year. At the time of his death, he had been planning a one-year stay in New York City.

Honors

Works

  • Mutmassungen über Jakob (Suhrkamp, 1959; in 1963 Grove Press published Ursula Molinaro's translation in the U.S. as Speculations about Jakob)
  • Das dritte Buch über Achim (1961, The third book about Achim)
  • Translator of Herman Melville's Israel Potter: His Fifty Years of Exile (1961)
  • Translator of Das Nibelungenlied from Middle High German (1961)
  • Translator of John Knowles's A Separate Peace (1959) as In diesem Land (1963)
  • Karsch, und andere Prosa (1964, Karsch, and other prose)
  • Eine Reise wegwohin (1964, An Absence)
  • Zwei Ansichten (1965 Two Views)
  • Editor of Bertolt Brecht's Me-ti. Buch der Wendungen. Fragmente 1933-1956 (Me-ti: the Book of Changes. Fragments, 1933-1956) (1965)
  • Editor of Das neue Fenster, a textbook of German-language readings for foreign students (1967)
  • Editor of textbook for the documentary film "A Summer in the City" (1968?)
  • Jahrestage. Aus dem Leben von Gesine Cresspahl, Volume I (1970, further volumes 1971, 1973, 1983; Anniversaries. From the Life of Gesine Cresspahl)
  • Eine Reise nach Klagenfurt (1974, A trip to Klagenfurt)
  • Berliner Sachen, Aufsätze (1975, Berlin things, essays)
  • Editor of Max Frisch Stich-Worte (1975, Max Frisch Reference)
  • Editor (together with Hans Mayer) of Das Werk von Samuel Beckett. Berliner Colloquium (1975, The work of Samuel Beckett: Berlin Colloquium)
  • Von dem Fischer un syner Fru (Of the fisherman and his wife; the German-language title is in dialect): a fairy tale by Philipp Otto Runge with seven pictures by Marcus Behmer, and a retelling and afterword by Uwe Johnson (1976)
  • Editor of Verzweigungen. Eine Autobiographie by journalist Margret Boveri (1977, Branchings: an Autobiography)
  • "Ein Schiff" ("A Ship") in: Jürgen Habermas (Editor) Stichworte zur "Geistigen Situation der Zeit" (References on "The spiritual situation of the time", Volume 1000 from the publisher Suhrkamp (1979)
  • "Ein unergründliches Schiff" ("An unfathomable ship") in: Merkur 33 (1979)
  • Skizze eines Verunglückten (Sketch of an accident victim, 1982)
  • Begleitumstände. Frankfurter Vorlesungen (1980, Attendant Circumstances: Frankfurt Lectures)
  • Ingrid Babendererde. Reifeprüfung 1953 (1992—posthumous; Ingrid Babendererde: Final Exam 1953; the "Reifeprüfung" is an examination in German schools, taken at the end of a course of study, and which one must pass to graduate.)

External links

References

  • Raimund Fellinger (Editor): Über Uwe Johnson. Frankfurt/Main, 1992.
  • Rainer Gerlach and Matthias Richter (Editor): Uwe Johnson. Frankfurt/Main, 1984.
  • Grambow, Jürgen: Uwe Johnson. Reinbek bei Hamburg, 1997.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

German Literature Companion. The Oxford Companion to German Literature. Copyright © 1976, 1986, 1997, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Uwe Johnson" Read more