Biography of Thomas Mann


Name: Paul Thomas Mann
• Birth: 6 June 1875, Lubeck, a free city of the German Empire.
• Father: Thomas Johann Heinrich Mann
• Mum: Julia da Silva Bruhance.
• Wife / Husband: Katia Pingashim.

Early life of Thomas Mann:


        Paul Thomas Mann was awarded a 1929 Nobel Prize in German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist and literary literature. His highly symbolic and irreconcilable epic and novels are known for his insights into the artist's psychology and intellectualness. His analysis and criticism of the European and German soul used the ideas of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Friedrich Nietzsche and Arthur Schopenhauer, along with the modern versions of German and Bible stories.

        Mann Hansetic Mann was a member of the family and he portrayed his family and class in his first novel, Büdenbrück. Three of his six children, Erica Mann, Claus Mann and Golo Mann, were also important German writers, Henry Mann and his elder brother hardliner Henrik Mann.

        When Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, Mann ran away from Switzerland When World War II broke out in 1939, he moved to the United States, then returned to Switzerland in 1952. Mann is one of the most famous expatriates of the so-called Accelerator, the German literature rule exiled by the Opponents of Hitler.

        Man's father died in 1891, and Mann moved to Munich, which was a center of art and literature, where he remained until 1933. After simple work in an insurance office and on a satirical book, editorial staff of Sympysismus, he dedicated himself to writing, as did his older brother Heinrich had already done.

        Their early stories were collected as Der Cleine's Green Friedman (1898), reflecting the beauty of the 1890s, but the depth of the philosophers has been profoundly influenced by the influence of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche and composer Wagner, of whom the values ​​are always considered to be a deep point Was for If ambiguous, debt Most of the first stories of the mind are about the problem of the creative artist, who in their devotion to fighting the futility of existence, a paradox that Maan surrendered between soul (Geest) and life (Leben).

        This ambition was fully received in his first novel, Budenbrück, which Mann had taken for the first time as a novel, in which the experience of Vagner's musical repertoire extinguished the desire to live in the son of the bourgeois family.

        In the beginning, the novel produces the story of the family and its business house over four generations, showing how an artistic streak not only unfolds the family members for the practicalities of business life but rather their Reduces life force too. But, almost against his will, Mann in Budenbrook wrote a tender for the old bourgeois properties.

        Mann wrote several fictional novels including ness Royal Highness '(1916) and Early Sorrow' (1929). 'The Magic Mountain' which is believed to have been the most critically acclaimed work of Mann published in 1924. It is said that it took ten years to complete this novel. His novel, 'Royal Hines' gave him Nobel Prize.

        This story was inspired by his happy marriage, resulting in a story about the form and life and their reunion. World War I changed the values ​​of values ​​about monarchy and German domination. He left Germany in 1933 and eventually settled in the US after living in France and Switzerland in 1938. He worked for some time at Princeton University.

        More novels of Mann include 'The Tales of Jacob' published in 1933 and next year 'The Young Joseph'. These characters were in Egypt with Joseph and his Joseph and his brothers had stories based on Bible characters in a part of Tetrology. Inspired by Russian culture, he wrote essays on Leo Tolstoy and his continuing realism.

        In 1929, Mann was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. In the late 1930s, he and his wife Cottage Pringheim moved to the United States, in which Man took the lecture at Princeton University. Fierce anti-fascism and anti-Nazism, he continued to write on August 12, 1955, until his death in Zurich, Switzerland.
ShowHideComments