Jakob van Hoddis
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Jakob van Hoddis (16 May 1887 – May/June 1942) was the pen name of the
Jewish Jews ( he, יְהוּדִים, , ) or Jewish people are an ethnoreligious group and nation originating from the Israelites Israelite origins and kingdom: "The first act in the long drama of Jewish history is the age of the Israelites""The ...
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expressionist Expressionism is a modernist movement, initially in poetry and painting, originating in Northern Europe around the beginning of the 20th century. Its typical trait is to present the world solely from a subjective perspective, distorting it rad ...
poet A poet is a person who studies and creates poetry. Poets may describe themselves as such or be described as such by others. A poet may simply be the creator ( thinker, songwriter, writer, or author) who creates (composes) poems ( oral or wri ...
Hans Davidsohn, of which "Van Hoddis" is an anagram. His most famous poem ''Weltende'' (''End of the world''), published on 11 January 1911 in the ''Der Demokrat'' magazine, is generally regarded as ushering in the Expressionist style of poetry and inspired many other poets to write in a similarly
grotesque Since at least the 18th century (in French and German as well as English), grotesque has come to be used as a general adjective for the strange, mysterious, magnificent, fantastic, hideous, ugly, incongruous, unpleasant, or disgusting, and thus ...
style; he is also seen as perhaps the only German predecessor of surrealism (which did not exist as a movement in Germany).


Life

Born in
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, he was the oldest son of the public health
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Hermann Davidsohn and his wife Doris, née Kempner. Mrs Davidsohn gave birth to twins, but the other baby was stillborn. He had four other siblings, Marie, Anna, Ludwig, and Ernst. The poet Friederike Kempner (1836-1904) was his great-aunt. He attended the renowned
Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium The Friedrich Wilhelm Gymnasium (or Friedrich-Wilhelms-Gymnasium) was a secondary school ( ''Gymnasium'') in Berlin. History The school originated from a Realschule founded by the Pietist Johann Julius Hecker in 1747, the first secondary school ...
; however, due to his temper (although he was extremely intelligent), he was not a successful student. He left school in 1905, to preempt his exclusion, but obtained his ''Abitur'' degree as an "external" student in the following year. The young man began studying architecture at the Technical University of Berlin, Technical College of Charlottenburg; in 1907, he joined the University of Jena to study classical philology. Later he returned to Berlin and continued his studies at the Humboldt University of Berlin, Frederick William University; here he met law graduate Kurt Hiller who encouraged him to develop his literary talents. Davidsohn had already composed poems during his schooldays. In 1909 he and his friend Kurt Hiller created the Expressionism, Expressionist ''Der Neue Club'' (''The New Club'') artists' society in the Hackesche Höfe courtyards; in March of the following year, they introduced their ideas at literary evenings they called ''Neopathetisches Cabaret'' (''Neo-pathetic Cabaret''). They were joined by Georg Heym, Ernst Blass and Erich Unger, soon followed by others, for example Alfred Lichtenstein (writer), Alfred Lichtenstein. Else Lasker-Schüler participated too (she said about van Hoddis' performances "''His verses are so ardent that one wants to steal them''" ). The last, ninth, evening of the Cabaret took place in the spring of 1912; it was a tribute to the tragically deceased Georg Heym. The Cabaret was very popular, often attracting hundreds of spectators. It was during one of these evenings when ''Weltende'' was recited, and electrified the audience totally. Many artists later remembered the impact the eight lines had on them that day. He used the pen name ''van Hoddis'' since the death of his father in 1909. During this part of his life, things started to get worse. Not only was he expelled from university for inactivity, but he lost his close friends, Georg Heym and Ernst Balcke, who both drowned in January 1912 ice-skating on the Havel river. He left Berlin for Munich, turned to Catholicism and, after he suffered a nervous breakdown, voluntarily entered a mental hospital. Although he was released and returned to Berlin, he was soon hospitalized again after attacking his mother. His mental health continued to decline, and he lived in private care from 1914 until 1922. In 1915, his younger brother Ludwig was killed in action as a soldier in World War I. From 1922, Van Hoddis lived in Tübingen, where his mother had placed him under the guardianship of his uncle. After 1927, when his mother lost her money, he came under the care of a state clinic (''Christophsbad'' in Göppingen). In 1933, immediately after Hitler's rise to power, Hitler's nomination as Reich Chancellor, Van Hoddis' family escaped to Tel Aviv (where his broken-hearted mother died a few months later). However, it proved impossible for him to secure an entrance certificate to the British Mandate of Anglo-Palestine due to his mental illness. He thus was forced to remain in Nazi Germany where Expressionism had come to be seen as an absolutely unacceptable or "degenerate art" form. Some Expressionist artists managed to flee the country with many more either committing suicide or who were murdered in Nazi concentration camps. Given that Van Hoddis was Jewish, an Expressionist writer, and also mentally ill (which then meant in Germany that he was subject to "Aktion T4, mercy killing"), his murder in Nazi Germany was almost guaranteed. On 30 April 1942, he and all the other patients and staff (about 500 people) of his sanatorium near Koblenz were transported to the Sobibór extermination camp via Krasnystaw. None of them survived. The exact date of van Hoddis' death remains unknown.


Works

Van Hoddis published numerous poems, characterised by cipher-like Dadaistic elements, in literary magazines such as ''Die Aktion'' or ''Der Sturm''. Only one collection, ''Weltende'', was published during his life, by Franz Pfemfert in 1918. André Breton included van Hoddis in his 1940 ''Anthology of Black Humor''. A major rediscovery of his work began after a new edition by Paul Pörtner in 1958. In the English language, English-speaking world he remains almost unknown. Posthumous collections: * Paul Pörtner (ed.): ''Jakob van Hoddis, Weltende.'' Gesammelte Dichtungen. Arche, Zürich, 1958 - Collected poems * Regina Nörtemann (ed.): ''Jakob van Hoddis.'' Dichtungen und Briefe. Wallstein, Göttingen, 2007, - Poetry and Letters


Weltende

Van Hoddis' poem ''Weltende'' was first published in 1911 and has been often translated into English. One of the closest versions—considering both the verse form and the spirit of the original, may be the adaption of Natias Neutert. ''Weltende'' Dem Bürger fliegt vom spitzen Kopf der Hut,
In allen Lüften hallt es wie Geschrei,
Dachdecker stürzen ab und gehn entzwei.
Und an den Küsten – liest man – steigt die Flut. Der Sturm ist da, die wilden Meere hupfen
An Land, um dicke Dämme zu zerdrücken.
Die meisten Menschen haben einen Schnupfen.
Die Eisenbahnen fallen von den Brücken. ''World's End'' From burgher's pointy head the hat flies.
In all quarters resounds hullaballoo.
Roof tilers plummet down and break in two.
Along the coasts— one reads — the floodings rise. The storm is here, wuthering seas are hopping
Ashore to crush dams as if they were midges.
Most people have a cold that is not stopping.
The railway waggons tumble down from bridges.


Literary influence

''Weltende'' is referenced in a poem by Catalan language, Catalan author Gabriel Ferrater called ''Fi del món'' ("End of the world"), which paraphrases some of its images.


References and external links


Jakob Van Hoddis article (in English) by Darran Anderson - Laika Poetry Review, including a translation of ''Weltende'' and photos




(German) * {{DEFAULTSORT:Hoddis, Jakob van 1887 births 1942 deaths German poets Jewish poets Writers from Berlin People from the Province of Brandenburg German Jews who died in the Holocaust German people who died in Sobibor extermination camp Expressionist poets German male poets 20th-century German poets 20th-century German male writers Aktion T4 victims