Erich Maria Remarque

Erich Maria Remarque[1] (born Erich Paul Remark; German: [ˈeːʁɪç maˈʁiːaː ʁeˈmaɐ̯k] (listen); 22 June 1898 – 25 September 1970) was a 20th-century German novelist. His landmark novel All Quiet on the Western Front (1928), about the German military experience of World War I, was an international best-seller which created a new literary genre, and was subsequently made into the film All Quiet on the Western Front (1930).

Erich Maria Remarque
Remarque in Davos, Switzerland in 1928
Born(1898-06-22)22 June 1898
Osnabrück, German Empire
Died25 September 1970(1970-09-25) (aged 72)
Locarno, Switzerland
OccupationNovelist
NationalityGerman
CitizenshipUnited States (1947–1970)
Notable worksAll Quiet on the Western Front
Spouse
Ilse Jutta Zambona
(
m. 1925; div. 1930)

(
m. 1958)

Early life

Erich Maria Remarque was born on 22 June 1898 into a working class Roman Catholic family in the German city of Osnabrück to Peter Franz Remark (b. 14 June 1867, Kaiserswerth) and Anna Maria (née Stallknecht; born 21 November 1871, Katernberg).[2] Remarque was the third of four children of Peter and Anna. His other siblings were his older sister Erna, older brother Theodor Arthur (who died at the age of five), and younger sister Elfriede (born 1903).[3]

Research by Remarque's childhood and lifelong friend Hanns-Gerd Rabe proved that in fact Remarque had French ancestors—his great-grandfather Johann Adam Remarque, who was born in 1789, came from a French family in Aachen.[4]

During World War I, Remarque was conscripted into the German Imperial Army at the age of 18. On 12 June 1917, he was transferred to the Western Front, 2nd Company, Reserves, Field Depot of the 2nd Guards Reserve Division at Hem-Lenglet. On 26 June 1917 he was posted to the 15th Reserve Infantry Regiment, 2nd Company, Engineer Platoon Bethe, and fought in the trenches between Torhout and Houthulst. On 31 July 1917 he was wounded by shell shrapnel in the left leg, right arm and neck, and after being medically evacuated from the field was repatriated to an army hospital in Germany where he spent the rest of the war recovering from his wounds, before being demobilized from the army.

After the war he continued his teacher training and worked from 1 August 1919 as a primary school teacher in Lohne, at that time in the county of Lingen, now in the county of Bentheim. From May 1920 he worked in Klein Berssen in the former County of Hümmling, now Emsland, and from August 1920 in Nahne, which has been a part of Osnabrück since 1972. On 20 November 1920 he applied for leave of absence from teaching. Remarque worked at a number of different jobs in this phase of his life, including librarian, businessman, journalist, and editor. His first paid writing job was as a technical writer for the Continental Rubber Company, a German tire manufacturer.[5]

Writing career

Remarque in Davos, 1929

Remarque had made his first attempts at writing at the age of 16. Among them were essays, poems, and the beginnings of a novel that was finished later and published in 1920 as The Dream Room (Die Traumbude).

After coming back from the war, the atrocities of war along with his mother’s death caused him a great deal of mental trauma and grief. In later years as a professional writer, he started using “Maria” as his middle name instead of “Paul”, in order to commemorate his mother.[3] When he published All Quiet on the Western Front, he had his surname reverted to an earlier spelling from Remark to Remarque to dissociate himself from his novel Die Traumbude.[6]

In 1927 he published the novel Station at the Horizon (Station am Horizont). It was serialised in the sports journal Sport im Bild for which Remarque was working. (It was first published in book form in 1998).

All Quiet on the Western Front (Im Westen nichts Neues) (1929), his career defining work, was written in 1927. Remarque was at first unable to find a publisher for it.[2] Its text described the experiences of German soldiers during World War I. On publication it became an international bestseller and a landmark work in twentieth-century literature. It inspired a new genre of veterans writing about conflict, and the commercial publication of a wide variety of war memoirs. It also inspired dramatic representations of the war in theatre and cinema, in Germany as well as in countries that had fought in the conflict against the German Empire, particularly the United Kingdom and the United States of America.

Riding on the tail of the success of All Quiet on the Western Front, a number of similar works followed from Remarque. In simple, emotive language, they described wartime and the postwar years in Germany. In 1931, after finishing The Road Back (Der Weg zurück), he bought a villa in Porto Ronco, Switzerland with the substantial financial wealth that his published works had brought him. He planned to live both there and in France.

After Adolf Hitler seized governmental power in Germany in March 1933, he was granted sweeping powers, creating a de-facto dictatorship. On 10 May 1933, at the initiative of the Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, Remarque's writing was publicly declared as "unpatriotic" and was banned in Germany. Copies were removed from all libraries and restricted from being sold or published anywhere in the country.

Germany was rapidly descending into a totalitarian society, leading to mass arrests of elements of the population that the new governing order disapproved of. Remarque left Germany to live at his villa in Switzerland. Remarque's French background as well as his Catholic faith were also publicly attacked by the Nazis. They continued to decry his writings in his absence, proclaiming that anyone who would change the spelling of his name from the German "Remark" to the French "Remarque" could not be a true German. The Nazis further made the false claim that Remarque had not seen active service during World War I. In 1938 Remarque's German citizenship was revoked. In 1939 he and his ex-wife were remarried to prevent her repatriation to Germany. Just before the outbreak of World War II in Europe, they left Porto Ronco, Switzerland for the United States.[7] They became naturalised citizens of the United States in 1947.[8]

Remarque continued to write about the German experience after WWI. His next novel, Three Comrades (Drei Kameraden), spans the years of the Weimar Republic, from the hyperinflation of 1923 to the end of the decade. His fourth novel, Flotsam (in German titled Liebe deinen Nächsten, or Love Thy Neighbour), first appeared in a serial version in English translation in Collier's magazine in 1939. He spent another year revising the text for its book publication in 1941, both in English and German. His next work, the novel Arch of Triumph, was first published in 1945 in English, and the next year in German as Arc de Triomphe. Another instant bestseller, it reached worldwide sales of nearly five million. His final novel was Shadows in Paradise. He wrote it while living at 320 East 57th Street in New York City. The apartment building "played a prominent role in his novel".[9]

In 1943 the Nazis arrested his youngest sister, Elfriede Scholz, who had stayed behind in Germany with her husband and two children. After a trial at the notorious "Volksgerichtshof" (Hitler's extra-constitutional "People's Court"), she was found guilty of "undermining morale" for stating that she considered the war lost. Court President Roland Freisler declared, "Ihr Bruder ist uns leider entwischt—Sie aber werden uns nicht entwischen" ("Your brother is unfortunately beyond our reach — you, however, will not escape us"). Scholz was beheaded on 16 December 1943.[10]

In exile, Remarque was unaware of his sister Elfriede's fate until after the war. He would dedicate his 1952 novel Spark of Life (Der Funke Leben) to her. The dedication was omitted in the German version of the book, reportedly because he was still seen as a traitor by some Germans.[11]

Later years

Remarque in 1961

In 1948, Remarque returned to Switzerland, where he spent the remainder of his life. There was a gap of seven years — a long silence for Remarque — between Arch of Triumph and his next work, Spark of Life (Der Funke Leben), which appeared both in German and in English in 1952. While he was writing The Spark of Life he was also working on a novel, Zeit zu leben und Zeit zu sterben (Time to Live and Time to Die). It was published first in English translation in 1954 with the not-quite-literal title A Time to Love and a Time to Die. In 1958, Douglas Sirk directed the film A Time to Love and a Time to Die in Germany, based on Remarque's novel. Remarque made a cameo appearance in the film in the role of the Professor.[12]

In 1955, Remarque wrote the screenplay for an Austrian film, The Last Act (Der letzte Akt), about Hitler's final days in the bunker of the Reich Chancellery in Berlin, which was based on the book Ten Days to Die (1950) by Michael Musmanno. In 1956, Remarque wrote a drama for the stage, Full Circle (Die letzte Station), which played in both Germany and on Broadway. An English translation was published in 1974. Heaven Has No Favorites was serialised (as Borrowed Life) in 1959 before appearing as a book in 1961 and was made into the 1977 film Bobby Deerfield. The Night in Lisbon (Die Nacht von Lissabon), published in 1962, is the last work Remarque finished. The novel sold some 900,000 copies in Germany.

Death

Remarque died of heart failure at the age of 72 in Locarno on 25 September 1970.[13] His body was buried in the Ronco Cemetery in Ronco, Ticino, Switzerland.[14] Paulette Goddard, Remarque's wife, died in 1990 and her body was interred next to her husband's. She left a bequest of US$20 million to New York University to fund an institute for European studies, which is named in honour of Remarque.[15]

Personal life

Remarque and Paulette Goddard in Porto Ronco, 1961

His first marriage was to the actress Ilse Jutta Zambona in 1925.[16]

The marriage was stormy and unfaithful on both sides. Remarque and Zambona divorced in 1930, but in 1933 they fled together to Switzerland.[17] In 1938 they remarried, to prevent her from being forced to return to Germany, and in 1939 they immigrated to the United States where they both became naturalized citizens in 1947.[18] They divorced again on 20 May 1957, this time for good. Ilse Remarque died on 25 June 1975.

During the 1930s, Remarque had relationships with Austrian actress Hedy Lamarr, Dolores del Río[19] and Marlene Dietrich.[20] The affair with Dietrich began in September 1937 when they met on the Lido while in Venice for the film festival and continued until at least 1940, maintained mostly by way of letters, cables and telephone calls. A selection of their letters was published in 2003 in the book "Sag Mir, Dass Du Mich Liebst" ("Tell Me That You Love Me")[21][22] and then in the 2011 play Puma.[23]

Remarque married actress Paulette Goddard in 1958.

Legacy

A commemorative plaque in memory of Erich Maria Remarque on Kaiserdamm Boulevard in Berlin, Germany
A commemorative plaque in memory of Erich Maria Remarque at the Wittelsbacherstrasse 5 in Berlin, Germany, unveiled on 22 June 1972

The first Director of The Remarque Institute was Professor Tony Judt.[24] Remarque's papers are housed at NYU's Fales Library.[25]

In November 2010, efforts to raise CHF6.2M (US$7M), to buy and save the villa of Erich Maria Remarque and Paulette Goddard from almost certain demolition were underway. The intent was to transform the 'Casa Monte Tabor' into a museum and home to an artist-in-residence programme.[26]

On a more mundane note, in the "Kaiserreich: Legacy of the Weltkrieg" mod of the popular strategy game Hearts of Iron IV, there are several references to Erich Maria Remarque. In this mod it is in fact described an alternative-history world in which the Central Powers won the Great War (known as Weltkrieg) in 1921 after the USA refused to intervene on the side of the Entente, even if the Central Powers emerged from the war much less victorious that they had originally thought of, forcing them to deal with different economic repercussions and post-war scenarios. As result Remarque was forced not only to serve as a soldier until his final de-mobilization in 1922, but also to face the economic depression when he returned home, the combined experience made him one of the most famous German anti-war intellectuals of his time in the mod universe, also receiving in 1935 the Nobel Prize in Literature for his works and activism, among his famous works in the mod are the Breakthrough (Durchbruch)(the universe version of All quiet on the Western Front ) and the fictional book A Third Reicht, which ironically is a Remarque's "Uchronia" book about a world with a victorious Entente in the Great War and a new "revanche" Third Reicht that is leading the world in a new World War, seen from the prospetive of a shellshocked veteran soldier of the Weltkrieg and while heavily criticized for the content, in the mod Remarque justificated himself saying "After all...... It Can't Happen Here".

List of works

Note: the dates of English publications are those of the first publications in book form.

Novels

Im Westen nichts Neues, 1929 original version.

Other works

  • (1931) Der Feind; English translation: The Enemy (1930–1931); short stories
  • (1955) Der letzte Akt; English translation: The Last Act; screenplay
  • (1956) Die letzte Station; English translation: Full Circle (1974); play
  • (1988) Die Heimkehr des Enoch J. Jones; English translation: The Return of Enoch J. Jones; play
  • (1994) Ein militanter Pazifist; English translation: A Militant Pacifist; interviews and essays
gollark: Which is yours?
gollark: It's a very lazy recursive tree thingy.
gollark: If you're wondering about the weird spacing, that's a quirk of the page→text stuff.
gollark: It's very common so it ignores it.
gollark: "the" is a "stopword".

See also

References

  1. English: /rəˈmɑːrk/;
  2. Robertson, William. "Erich Remarque". Retrieved 25 June 2009.
  3. "Erich Maria Remarque Biography". CliffsNotes. Retrieved 7 August 2020.
  4. Landová, Jolana: Exil, Krieg und Flucht in Frankreich zwischen 1933 und 1941, dargestellt an ausgewählten Werken deutscher Schriftsteller, Charles University in Prague, 2009, p. 46.
  5. "Exactly as it happened... (the story of an encounter in Ticino with Remarque and the coach-built Lancia Dilambda, which following All Quiet on the Western Front, he purchased in 1931 and retained till the late 1960s)". Motor. Vol. 3506. 30 August 1969. pp. 26–30.
  6. Afterword by Brian Murdoch, translator of 1996 English edition of All Quiet on the Western Front. London: Vintage Books. 1996. p. 201. ISBN 978-0-09-953281-1.
  7. "Finding Aid for Erich Maria Remarque Papers, 1938–1973", Department of Special Collections and Archives, State University of New York-Albany. 2009; accessed 31 July 2012.
  8. Schneider, Thomas (1991). Erich Maria Remarque: Ein Chronist des 20. Jahrhunderts, Eine Biographie in Bildern und Dokumenten. Germany: Rasch Verlag Bramsche. pp. 94–95.
  9. Ullmann, Michaela. "Research Guides: Exiled German-speaking intellectuals in Southern California: Erich Maria Remarque". libguides.usc.edu.
  10. "Elfriede Scholz Obituary" (in German). Osnabrück Cultural Website. 15 December 2005. Archived from the original on 24 September 2009. Retrieved 25 June 2009.
  11. Sauer, Patrick (16 June 2015). "The Most Loved and Hated Novel About World War I". Smithsonian.com. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  12. "Erich Maria Remarque". IMDb. Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  13. Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 56: German Fiction Writers, 1914–1945. A Bruccoli Clark Layman Book. Edited by James Hardin, University of South Carolina. The Gale Group, 1987. pp. 222–41
  14. The New York Times
  15. Lorch, Donatella. "Paulette Goddard Left N.Y.U. $20 Million", New York Times, 18 May 1990; accessed 29 July 2012.
  16. Liukkonen, Petri. "Erich Maria Remarque". Books and Writers. Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 1 August 2008.
  17. Taylor, Marvin J. The life and writings of Erich Maria Remarque, New York: Fales Library, New York University, 2011; accessed 29 July 2012.
  18. Bloom, Harold (2001). "Chronology". Modern Critical Interpretations: Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front. Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers. p. 157.
  19. Latins in Hollywood: Dolores del Río, latinasdeayer.blogspot.mx; accessed 24 August 2017.
  20. Connolly, Kate. "Marlene and the wall", The Guardian, 18 April 2002.
  21. Fuld, Werner & Thomas F. Schneider (eds). "Dass Du Mich Liebst: Erich Maria Remarque — Marlene Dietrich Zeugnisse einer Leidenschaft ("Tell Me That You Love Me: Erich Maria Remarque-Marlene Dietrich. Evidence of a Passion). Koln: Kiepenheuer & Witsch, 2003.
  22. Germany, SPIEGEL ONLINE, Hamburg. "Marlene Dietrich und Remarque: "Madonna meines Blutes" - SPIEGEL ONLINE — Kultur". SPIEGEL ONLINE.
  23. Jones, Kenneth. "Marlene Dietrich is Focus of Puma, a NJ Rep World Premiere Starting Feb. 24." Archived 24 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Playbill.com, 24 February 2011; accessed 29 July 2012.
  24. "About Us", Remarque Institute. New York University; accessed 29 July 2012.
  25. Taylor, Marvin J. "Introduction", The life and writings of Erich Maria Remarque. New York: Fales Library, New York University, 2011; accessed 29 July 2012.
  26. swissinfo.ch, Gerhard Lob. "Remarque-Villa im Tessin droht der Abbruch".

Further reading

  • Parvanová, Mariana (2010). "... das Symbol der Ewigkeit ist der Kreis". Eine Untersuchung der Motive in den Romanen von Erich Maria Remarque (in German). München: GRIN-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-640-64739-2.
  • Parvanová, Mariana (2009). E. M. Remarque in der kommunistischen Literaturkritik in der Sowjetunion und in Bulgarien (in German). Remscheid: ReDiRoma Verlag. ISBN 978-3-86870-056-5.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.