Samuel Lublinski

Samuel Lublinski (1868-1910) was a Berlin-based writer, literary historian, critic, and philosopher of religion. He was a pioneer of the socio-historical study of literary movements and a major contributor to the debates about German-Jewish national and cultural identity of the era.

Life

Born 18 February 1868 in Johannisburg, East Prussia (now Pisz, Poland), Samuel Lublinski came from a secular German Jewish family, and was the son of a businessman. He studied at several schools in Königsberg, but was repeatedly forced to leave because of his argumentative character.[1]

In 1887, when he moved to Verona to work for the bookseller by Leo Olschki. He later moved to Venice. In 1892 he returned to Germany and set up independently as a bookseller in Heidelberg, but in 1895 finally abandoned his profession to become a full-time writer. From 1895 he moved to Berlin, becoming a journalist and essayist on numerous topics. His first book was Jewish characters in Grillparzer, Hebbel and Otto Ludwig (1899). His first truly important work was the four volume Litteratur und Gesellschaft (Literature and Society) (1899/1900), which examines the origin and development of Romanticism in German literature, and explores the social and cultural context in which it camer into being. It is considered the fist "sociological" account of literature in Germany. He followed this with Die Bilanz der Moderne (1904) and Der Ausgang der Moderne (1909), which articulated his personal views of naturalism and neo-romanticism.[1]

Lublinski subsequently tried his hand as a playwright, but was not successful. Of his six plays only the last, Kaiser und Kanzler (1910) was ever produced - in 1913, three year after his death. One of the others, Gunther und Brunhild is an alternative take on the Niebelungenlied in which the conflict between the main characters becomes a psychological drama.[1]

Lublinski was also a proponent of Christ myth theory, the denial of the historical existence of Jesus. In his last years researched his unfinished project Der urchristliche Erdkreis und sein Mythus, publishing a series of booklets and essays in 1910 in which he argued that Christianity emerged from a fusion of late Judaism with Oriental and Hellenistic mystery cults.[1]

Zionism and feuds

Lublinski was initially a staunch supporter of Zionism and was a regular contributor to Theodor Herzl's periodical Die Welt using the pseudonym Solomon Liebhardt. However, he later withdrew from the journal when he came to identify more as "a German than a thoroughbred Jew"; he felt himself to be German "from psychological force", not merely from "theoretical conviction". As a result, he believed that he could not identify with any other nationality. He remained a supporter of Zionism, but believed that he could never go to live in Palestine himself. In letters to Herzl written in May 1899 he explained his position, asserting that he did not want to fully assimmilate into German identity, but could not imagine himself owing alliegance to another nation. After 1901, however, he argued for full assimilation of German Jews.[1]

Lublinski became embroiled in several literary and intellectual feuds, particularly about claims of writers to priority in various fields. The biggest feud was with Theodor Lessing, progenitor of the concept of "self-hating" Jews, who published an extremely sharp satire on Lublinski, starting with derisory comments about his "little beautiful" appearance.[2] The attack led to an equally sharply worded response from Thomas Mann, creating a literary scandal in 1910.[1]

Lublinski was working on a new play about Rienzi and various other projects when he died suddenly on 26 December 1910 while staying with his sister in Weimar.[1]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Lublinski, Samuel Pseudonym Salomo Liebhardt, Silvio Peregrinus, Sylvester", Deutsche Biographie
  2. Theodor Lessing: Samuel zieht die Bilanz und Tomi melkt die Moralkuh oder Zweier Könige Sturz. Eine Warnung für Deutsche, Satiren zu schreiben. Von Theodor Lessing. Mit Literarischen Beiträgen von Thomas Mann, Samuel Lublinski und den vierzig sittlichsten deutschen Dichtern und Denkern. Verlag des Antirüpel, Hannover 1910.
  3. Provozierte 1897 eine Erwiderung Achad Haams, der Lublinskis Standpunkt als jüdischen "Nationalismus zum Zwecke der Assimilation" bezeichnete (Haschiloach, 1897).
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.