Herman HESSE and his most important BOOKS
Hermann Hesse He was born in Calw in the year 1877. He was a German novelist who dedicated his writing to the pursuit of self-realization and later, to spirituality. He is a very relevant author of the twentieth century and a prominent figure in the world of letters, he came to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1946. His works are so well known and his writing so characteristic that in a PROFESSOR we have prepared a short compilation on Herman Hesse and his most important books.
We find "Demian" like the book that was an important step in his career, but they are also well known and studied, for example, "Steppe wolf"or "Siddhartha". It is true that in his works there is a small change in the writing, which at the beginning is more directed towards a search for himself that passes through friendship and love, he ends up becoming a much more spiritual search after his trip to India producing books that are today the head of Buddhist and Eastern culture in the West.
Index
- The Steppe Wolf, one of the most important books by Hermann Hesse
- Demian, another very prominent Hermann Hesse book
- Siddhartha
- Under the wheels
- the game of the abalors
The Steppe Wolf, one of the most important books by Hermann Hesse.
The novel that Hermann Hesse most cultivated was classified as training novel. "Steppe wolf" is one of Hesse's top novels in this genre. Work of the year 1927 written in full maturity of the artist -50 years- and that relates through the main character, Harry Haller, the crisis that he suffered during that time. All one novel self-analysis which ends up also becoming the analysis of a generation and an era.
On the one hand, this story tells the journey that contemporary man makes towards a world of anguish and terrors to which he is led. On the other hand, through different narrative voices and settings, Hermann Hesse offers the portrait of an individual that he loves live outside of social conventions. It is probably the work that is most closely related to the author's name and for which he is best known.
Image: Pinterest
Demian, another very prominent Hermann Hesse book.
Published in the year 1919, "Demian"is another of Hermann Hesse's books that you should know. It is a portrait of the second decade in the 20th century Europe. Germany on the brink of the Great War: an infamous garbage full of dirt, disgusting and rude. Emil Sinclair is the main character, who is beginning to discover the world. Beatrice, will be the first personification of sexuality in Sinclair's life while Max Demian, the boy who comes to school again and befriends Emil, represents a kind of psychologist and truth.
Reflects in such a way the spirit of the times that there are clear influences fromNietzsche and psychoanalysis, especially the Jungian. The theme of good and evil and how it is portrayed in the Bible, is also recurrent in the work. A story about death and resurrection, about the encounter with oneself in the middle of adolescence. Love and death to the State. Love and death to the word of God. Love and death to morality.
Image: Slideshare
Siddhartha.
Written in 1922, Siddhartha is a book where the reader must walk hand in hand with the protagonist to discover the reason for his existence. A rich and unpleasant path at the same time, spiritual, where the author, influenced by his trip to India, will show us the brightest part of it. Both lyrical and reflective registers appear in the novel, history is mixed with meditation. It was highly acclaimed in the East and it is one of the top novels on Eastern philosophy and Buddhism in the West.
The novel tells the story of a young brahman (priest) and a young Hindu known as Buddha that seeks in any way possible his life path. His faithful friend Govinda will take him on a personal journey and they decide to go live with the Samanas, men who have abandoned everything to dedicate themselves to meditation and live with practically nothing. A book that perfectly reflects the search for harmony and tranquility.
Image: Youtube
Under the wheels.
Another of Hermann Hesse's best books is this novel that was published in 1906. It is the second novel of the German Nobel Prize. Hans Giebenrath, a child prodigy admitted to a high-level seminar, conducts a devastating criticism of the educational system that does not take into account the personal and emotional development of the individual but simply the academic qualifications.
The dichotomies between rationalism and spirituality they appear constantly in the work. Hermann Hesse has always fought for the understanding of the human being and has been concerned for generations to come. Hesse understood that the more emotional education was forgotten, the easier it was for the political power to take over citizens at will. Hesse believed that state institutions tore the sensitivity, a very important element in the human being.
The game of the abalors.
Posted in 1943 this work is set in the future, year 2400. Written by an anonymous chronicler, the narrative consists of three parts and features three main protagonists: Castalia, a pedagogical province, Joseph Knetch, a master of the Bead Game -a realization game- and lastly, the same Play.
The game of beads is a universal, interdisciplinary, values game that acts almost like a universal language. The game is eternal and brings together various spiritual themes, it is the search for the mystical union of all the world elements in a province -Castalia- where everyone is dedicated to life intellectual. It is a utopian work that aims to bring together all the knowledge of humanity in one, perhaps it is the strangest of all his works but it continues in his line of training novel.
If you want to read more articles similar to Hermann Hesse: Most Important Books, we recommend that you enter our category of History of Literature.
Bibliography
- Biographies and lives (2004-2019). Hermann Hesse: Biographies and Lives, the online biographical encyclopedia. Recovered from: https://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/h/hesse.htm
- Martínez, I. (2011). Hermann Hesse's training novel as a testimony of an identity and a philosophy of life: the construction of the outsider in The Steppe Wolf. Space, Time and Form, Series V, Contemporary History (23), 73-94.
- Moral, N. (2013). Demian, the path to oneself. Pastiche (8), 18-21.
- Muñoz, R. Under the wheels. The Electrobardo, narrative and grammar on-line. Recovered from: http://www.elelectrobardo.com/resources/Bajolasruedas.pdf
- Nepomuceno, M. (2017). Siddhartha. The deconstruction of the self. Zenda, authors, books and company. Recovered from: https://www.zendalibros.com/siddhartha-la-deconstruccion-del-yo/
- Uribe, A. The game of beads or game of interdisciplinarity. Research Center for Integral Development. Recovered from: file: /// C: /Users/Usuario/Downloads/4465-9030-1-SM.pdf