Alfred Lichtenstein

Writer, Author

1889 – 1914

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Who was Alfred Lichtenstein?

Alfred Lichtenstein was a German expressionist writer.

Lichtenstein grew up in Berlin as the son of a manufacturer. He finished a study of law in Erlangen. His was first recognized after publishing poems and short stories in a grotesque style, which recalls a friend of his, Jakob van Hoddis.

Indeed, there were voices, claiming an imitation: while Hoddis created this style, Lichtenstein has enlarged it, was said. Lichtenstein played a little around with that reputation by writing a short story, called "The winner", which describes in a scurill way the by chance made friendship of two young man, wherein one falls victim to the other. By using false names he often joshes real persons of the Berlin 1920´th, including himself as Kuno Kohn, a silent shy boy; in "The winner" it is a caricaturedvirile van Hoddis, who kills Kuno Kohn at the end of the story. Lichtenstein liked the manner of the French writer Alfred Jarry not only in his ironic writings, like him he rode his bicycle through the town. He did not get old: in 1914 he fell at the front in World War I.

Der einzige Trost ist: traurig sein. Wenn die Traurigkeit in Verzweiflung ausartet, soll man grotesk werden.

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Born
Aug 23, 1889
Berlin
Also known as
  • Лихтенштейн, Альфред
Nationality
  • Germany
Profession
Education
  • Humboldt University of Berlin
  • University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Died
Sep 25, 1914
Somme

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

Citation

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