Will Vesper (11 October 1882 – 14 March 1962) was a German author and literary critic who was involved in the Nazi book burnings.
Born into a Protestant farmer family in Barmen, he read History and Germanic philology (Germanistik) in Munich. From 1906, he was active as literary adviser and translator at the C. H. Beck publishing house. In 1913–1914, he was in Florence, Italy. He rose to early fame as the editor of several anthologies of German poetry of a spiritual kind, including Der deutsche Psalter and two volumes of Die Ernte aus acht Jahrhunderten deutscher Lyrik, and for his retelling of the Tristan and Isolde and Parzifal legends, all of which sold in tens of thousands before 1914. Vesper took part in World War I from 1915 to 1918, first as an infantryman, and towards the end of the war as scientific or intelligence assistant in the military staff.
After a two-year period as manager of the cultural section of the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung from 1918 to 1920, Vesper was employed from 1923 until 1943 as editor of the periodical Die schöne Literatur (Beautiful Literature), later under the title Die Neue Literatur (New Literature), which was to become the leading national socialist literature magazine. At the same time he published his own novels, stories and poems. His works mainly dealt with German history, and above all with proto-Germanic times. In these he displayed a decidedly nationalistic perception, which together with his glorification and exalting of the love of the native soil, of motherhood and war, made it inevitable that he would become a representative of Nazi ideology. His best-known work Das harte Geschlecht, about the Christian conversion of Iceland, appeared in 1931, and in May 1933 was praised in the Völkischer Beobachter as a "thoroughly bloodthirsty Northland novel". [1]
In 1931, Vesper, whom Thomas Mann described as "already one of the worst of the nationalist buffoons", [2] [3] joined the NSDAP. After the exclusion of the disapproved authors from the Poetry department of the Academy of Prussian Arts like Thomas Mann, Leonhard Frank, Alfred Döblin, and others, Vesper installed among others Hans Friedrich Blunck, Hans Carossa, and Hans Grimm in the Poets Academy around 1933. In the May 1933 public book-burning in Dresden, Vesper gave the ceremonial speech. He was one of the 88 authors who in October 1933 signed the Vow of the Loyal Followers (Gelöbnis treuester Gefolgschaft) for Adolf Hitler published in the Vossische Zeitung and Frankfurter Zeitung . [1]
Already, at the beginning of the thirties, Vesper was becoming known as an author of the Bertelsmann editions. In his literary Journal Die Neue Literatur Vesper carried out a kind of private censorship or revisionism, regularly embarking upon defamatory campaigns against authors and publishers who did not agree with his personal views. When he also did not hold back from attacking the State Directives in regard to writing, he lost the advantage of his position. By 1936, he withdrew from his duties to the estate of his wife Rose (Rimpau) Vesper at Triangel bei Gifhorn, where he occupied himself as a farmer but also continued to issue his literary newsletters until the year 1943.
After the war, Vesper was an editor in the Bertelsmann-Verlag and was active in right-wing circles through readings and Writers' Congresses for Hans Grimm in Lippoldsberg, also where he worked. He died in Gut Triangel, near Gifhorn, on 14 March 1962. Vesper's son, the author Bernward Vesper (1938–1971), also became well known when his autobiographic novel Die Reise (Journey, or, Trip) was posthumously published in 1977. As a student of German studies and sociology, he had been the partner of Gudrun Ensslin, who later became founder of the Red Army Faction. Die Reise is considered an important document of the spirit of the German student movement and German society of the 1960s.
Novels, stories, and fables
Dramas and farces
Poems
Essays and editions
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