Everything about Robert Walser Writer totally explained
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For the U.S. musicologist, see Robert Walser (musicologist).
Robert Walser (
April 15 1878 near
Biel/Bienne,
Switzerland –
December 25 1956 near
Herisau, Switzerland), was a
German-speaking
Swiss writer.
Life and Work
1878 - 1897
Walser was born in a family with many children. His brother
Karl Walser was a well-known
stage designer and
painter. Walser grew up in Biel, which lies on the
language border between German and
French. He grew up speaking both languages. He attended primary school and
progymnasium which he'd to leave before the final exam when his family could no longer afford it. From his early years on, he was an enthusiastic
theatre-goer; his favorite play was
The Robbers by
Friedrich Schiller. There is a
Watercolor painting that shows Walser as Karl Moor, the protagonist of that play.
From 1892 to 1895, Walser served an
apprenticeship at the
Bernische Kantonalbank in Biel. Afterwards he worked for a short time in
Basel. Walser's mother, who was "emotionally disturbed", died in 1894 after being under medical care for a long period. In 1895, Walser went to
Stuttgart where his brother Karl lived. He was an office worker at the
Deutsche Verlagsanstalt and at the
Cotta'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung; he also tried, without success, to become an actor. On foot, he returned to Switzerland where he registered 1896 in
Zürich. In the following years, he often worked as a "Kommis", that is, as an office clerk, but irregularly and in many different places. As a result, he was one of the first German writers to introduce into literature a description of the life of a salaried employee.
1898 - 1912
In 1898, the influential critic
Joseph Victor Widmann published a series of poems by Walser in the
Bernese newspaper
Der Bund. This came to the attention of
Franz Blei, and he introduced Walser to the
Art Nouveau people around the magazine
Die Insel, including
Frank Wedekind,
Max Dauthendey and
Otto Julius Bierbaum. Numerous short stories and poems by Walser appeared in
Die Insel.
Until 1905, Walser lived mainly in Zürich, though he often changed lodgings and also lived for a time in
Thun,
Solothurn,
Winterthur and
Munich. In 1903, he fulfilled his military service obligation and, beginning that summer, was the "aide" of an engineer and inventor in
Wädenswil near Zürich. This episode became the basis of his 1908 novel
Der Gehülfe (
The Assistant). In 1904, his first Book,
Fritz Kochers Aufsätze, appeared in the
Insel Verlag.
At the end of 1905 he attended a course in order to become a servant at the castle of Dambrau in
Upper Silesia. The theme of serving would characterize his work in the following years, especially in the novel
Jakob von Gunten (1909). In 1905, he went to live in
Berlin, where his brother Karl Walser, who was working as a theater painter, introduced him to other figures in literature, publishing, and the theater. Occasionally, Walser worked as secretary for the artists' corporation
Berliner Secession.
In Berlin, Walser wrote the novels
Geschwister Tanner,
Der Gehülfe and
Jakob von Gunten. They were issued by the publishing house of
Bruno Cassirer, where
Christian Morgenstern worked as editor. Apart from the novels, he wrote many short stories, sketching popular bars from the point of view of a poor
"flaneur" in a very playful and subjective language. There was a very positive echo to his writings.
Robert Musil and
Kurt Tucholsky, among others, stated their admiration for Walser's prose, and authors like
Hermann Hesse and
Franz Kafka counted him among their favorite writers.
Walser published numerous short stories in newspapers and magazines, many for instance in the
Schaubühne. They became his trademark. The larger part of his work is composed of short stories—literary sketches that elude a ready categorization. Selections of these short stories were published in the volumes
Aufsätze (1913) and
Geschichten (1914).
1913 - 1929
In 1913, Walser returned to Switzerland. He lived for a short time with his sister Lisa in the mental home in
Bellelay, where she worked as a teacher. There, he got to know Lisa Mermet, a washer-woman with whom he developed a close friendship. After a short stay with his father in Biel, he went to live in a mansard in the Biel hotel
Blaues Kreuz. In 1914, his father died.
In Biel, Walser wrote a number of shorter stories that appeared in newspapers and magazines in Germany and Switzerland and selections of which were published in
Der Spaziergang (1917),
Prosastücke (1917),
Poetenleben (1918),
Seeland (1919) and
Die Rose (1925). Walser, who had always been an enthusiastic wanderer, began to take extended walks, often by night. In his stories from that period, texts written from the point of view of a wanderer walking through unfamiliar neighborhoods alternate with playful essays on writers and artists.
During
World War I, Walser repeatedly had to go into military service. At the end of 1916, his brother Ernst died after a time of mental illness in the
Waldau mental home. In 1919, Walser's brother Hermann, geography professor in Bern, committed suicide. Walser himself became isolated in that time, when there was almost no communication with Germany because of the war. Even though he worked hard, he could barely afford to support himself as a freelance writer. At the beginning of 1921, he moved to
Bern in order to work at the public record office. He often changed lodgings and lived a very solitary life.
During his time in Bern, Walser's style became more radical. In a more and more condensed form, he wrote "micrograms" ("Mikrogramme"), called thus because of his minuscule pencil hand that's very difficult to decipher: poems, prose, dramolets and novels—
The Robber (Der Räuber). In these texts, his playful, subjective style moved toward a higher abstraction. Many texts of that time work on multiple levels—they can be read as naive-playful
feuilltons or as highly complex montages full of allusions. Walser absorbed influences from serious literature as well as from
formula fiction and retold for example the plot of a pulp novel in a way that the original (the title of which he never revealed) was unrecognizable. Much of his work was written during these very productive years in Bern.
1929 - 1956
In the beginning of 1929, Walser, who had suffered from anxieties and hallucinations for quite a time, went to the Bernese mental home Waldau, after a mental breakdown, at his sister Fani's urging. In his medical records it says: "The patient confessed hearing voices." Therefore, this can hardly be called a voluntary commitment. While in the mental home, his state of mind quickly returned to normal, and he went on writing and publishing. More and more, he used the way of writing he called the "pencil method": He wrote poems and prose in a diminutive
Sütterlin hand, the letters of which measured about a millimeter of height by the end of that very productive phase. Werner Morlang and Bernhard Echte were the first ones who attempted to decipher these writings. In the 1990s, they published a six-volume edition,
Aus dem Bleistiftgebiet ('From the pencil area'). Only when Walser was, against his will, moved to the sanatorium of
Herisau in his home canton
Appenzell Ausserrhoden, did he quit writing. Another reason might have been that with the rise of the
Nazis in Germany, his works could no longer be published in any case.
In 1936, his admirer
Carl Seelig began to visit him. He later wrote a book,
Wanderungen mit Robert Walser about their talks. Seelig tried to revive interest in Walser's work by re-issuing some of his writings. After the death of Walser's brother Karl in 1943 and of his sister Lisa in 1944, Seelig became Walser's legal guardian. Though free of outward signs of mental illness for a long time, Walser was crotchety and repeatedly refused to leave the sanatorium.
Robert Walser loved long, lonely walks. On the 25th of December of 1956 he was found, dead of a heart attack, in a field of snow near the asylum. The photographs of the dead walker in the snow are almost eerily reminiscent of a similar image of a dead man in the snow in Walser's first novel,
Geschwister Tanner.
Writings and reception
A characteristic of Walser's texts is a playful serenity behind which hide existential fears. Today, Walser's texts, completely re-edited since the 1970s, are regarded as among the most important writings of literary
modernism. In his writing, he made use of elements of
Swiss German in a charming and original manner, while very personal observations are intervowen with
texts about texts, that is, with contemplations and variations of other literary works, at which Walser often mixes pulp fiction with high literature.
Walser, who never belonged to a literary school or group, perhaps with the exception of the circle around the magazine
Die Insel in his youth, was a notable and often published writer before World War I and into the 1920s. After the second half of the latter decade, he was rapidly forgotten, in spite of Carl Seelig's editions, which appeared almost exclusively in Switzerland but received little attention.
Walser was only rediscovered in the 1970s, even though very famous German writers such as
Christian Morgenstern,
Franz Kafka,
Walter Benjamin, and
Hermann Hesse were among his great admirers. Since then, almost all his writings have become accessible through an extensive republication of his entire body of work. He has exerted a considerable influence on various contemporary German writers, including
Ror Wolf,
Peter Handke,
W. G. Sebald, and
Max Goldt.
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