Heinrich mann novels about the holocaust
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Heinrich Mann Biography
Heinrich Mann was a prominent German author whose works reflected his keen observations on society and politics. His novels and essays spanned various genres and left a significant impact on German literature.
Early Life and Education
Born on March 27, 1871, in Lübeck, Germany, Luiz Heinrich Mann was the eldest son of a wealthy merchant family. Heinrich’s early life was marked by his exposure to the culture and trads of Lübeck, which would later feature prominently in his works.
He attended the Katharineum Gymnasium in Lübeck. His educational journey took a decisive turn against his father’s commercial aspirations for him, as Heinrich chose to pursue a literary career instead.
In 1890, following his father's death, Heinrich moved to Munich to establish himself as a writer. His time in Munich played a crucial role in shaping his literary voice and provided him with valuable connections in the literary circles.
Litera
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Heinrich Mann
Excerpt
In reality, the Germans are the last people who have a right to hate the Jews, because they are too similar to the Jews. The Jews also distinguish themselves as individuals among the German "great men." As individuals, they often surpass the worth of their nation....Music is considered the most German of all arts, and among its most brilliant and devoted contributors are many Jews.
—Hatred (Der Hass), Heinrich Mann, 1933
Fire Oath
"Fire oaths" were statements to be read as books were tossed to the flames. The German Student Association sent out a circular containing these statements before the book burnings. The fire oaths then accompanied the burning of works written bygd the individual authors named in the statements.
Against decadence and moral decay
For discipline and decency in family and state
Heinrich Mann, Ernst Glaeser, and Erich Kästner
Which of Heinrich Mann's Works were Burned?
All works published before May 1933
Who was He
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The best Holocaust novel everFranz Werfel’s classic The Forty Days of Musa Dagh, about the Armenian Genocide, gets a new translation.
June 5, 2012
Source: Tablet Magazine
By Liel Leibovit
Summers in the Salzkammergut were the happiest times of the novelist Franz Werfel’s young life. In Prague, he and his family were a minority twice over—Jews in a Christian town, Germans amid the Czechs. He remembered the days of rioting led by the Glovemakers’ Union that the local authorities struggled for almost a week to put down; Franz’s father, Rudolf, was the biggest glovemaker in town. It was all the proof Werfel, then 7 years old, needed that he didn’t belong.Things were different in the Salzkammergut forest, filled with the scent of tree resin and thin Alpine air, droves of cousins and idle days to fill with inventions. Franz wrote plays with biblical themes and titles like Classical Philistines that were secretly meant to insult his teachers and rivals at the gymnasium by casti