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{{Short description|Austrian writer and translator (1868–1932)}} {{Infobox person | name = Gustav Meyrink | image = Gustav Meyrink 3.png | image_size = | caption = Meyrink around 1886 | birth_name = Gustav Meyer | birth_date = {{Birth date|1868|01|19|df=y}} | birth_place = [[Vienna]], [[Austria-Hungary]] (now Austria) | death_date = {{Death date and age|1932|12|04|1868|01|19|df=y}} | death_place = [[Starnberg]], [[Free State of Bavaria | Bavaria]], [[Weimar Republic]] | body_discovered = | death_cause = | resting_place = Starnberg Cemetery | resting_place_coordinates = <!-- {{coord|LAT|LONG|display=inline,title}} --> | nationality = Austrian | citizenship = Austria | other_names = | known_for = ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|The Golem]]'' | education = | alma_mater = | employer = | occupation = | years_active = | title = | networth = | height = | term = | predecessor = | successor = | party = | opponents = | boards = | spouse = | partner = | children = Sibylle Felizitas Böhler (1906), Harro Fortunat Meyrink (1908) | parents = [[Baron Karl von und zu Hemmingen|Karl von Varnbüler]] and Maria Wilhelmina Adelheyd Meier. | relations = | callsign = | signature = | website = | footnotes = }} '''Gustav Meyrink''' (19 January 1868 – 4 December 1932) was the pseudonym of '''Gustav Meyer''', an Austrian author, novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker, most famous for his novel ''[[The Golem (Meyrink novel)|The Golem]]''. He has been described as the "most respected German language writer in the field of supernatural fiction".<ref name="mf">{{ cite encyclopedia | author = Frenschkowski, M. | title = Meyrink, Gustav | editor1-first = S. T. | editor1-last = Joshi | editor1-link = S. T. Joshi | editor2-first = S. R. | editor2-last = Dziemianowicz | encyclopedia = Supernatural Literature of the World: An Encyclopedia | location = Westport, CT | publisher = Greenwood Press | year = 2005 | isbn = 0-313-32777-7 | pages = 803–805 }}</ref> ==Childhood== Gustav Meyrink was born with the name ''Gustav Meyer'' in [[Vienna]], [[Austria-Hungary]] (now Austria) on 19 January 1868. He was the [[illegitimacy|illegitimate]] son of Baron [[Karl von Varnbüler und zu Hemmingen]], a [[Kingdom of Württemberg|Württembergian]] minister, and actress [[Maria Wilhelmina Adelheyd Meier]]. Meyrink was not, despite the statements of some of his contemporaries, of Jewish descent – this rumour arose due to a confusion of his mother with a Jewish woman of the same name.<ref name="mf" /> Until thirteen years of age Meyrink lived mainly in [[Munich]], where he completed elementary school. He then stayed in [[Hamburg]] for a brief time, until his mother relocated to [[Prague]] in 1883. ==Prague== Meyrink lived in Prague for twenty years and has depicted it many times in his works. In 1889, together with the nephew of poet [[Christian Morgenstern]], Meyrink established his own banking company, named "Meier & Morgenstern". In Prague an event occurred which played a providential role in Meyrink's life. Meyrink described it in the [[autobiographical]] [[short story]] "The Pilot". That day, 14 August 1892, on [[Assumption of Mary|Assumption]] Eve, Meyrink, twenty-four years old, was allegedly standing at his table with a gun at his head, determined to shoot himself. At that moment he heard a strange scratching sound and someone's hand put a tiny booklet under his door. The booklet was called [[Afterlife]]. Meyrink was surprised by this dramatic coincidence and started to study the literature of the [[occult]].<ref name="mf" /> He studied [[Theosophy (Blavatskian)|theosophy]], [[Kabbalah|Kabbala]], Christian [[Sophiology]] and Eastern [[mysticism]]. Until his death Meyrink practiced [[yoga]] and other occult exercises. Results of these studies and practices are found in Meyrink's works, which almost always deal with various occult [[tradition]]s. In 1902 Meyrink was charged with fraud. He was charged with using [[Kardecist spiritism|spiritualism]]{{how?|date=December 2022}} in order to benefit from banking operations. Though after two months he was released from jail, his banking career was effectively ended. His jailhouse experiences are depicted in his most famous novel, ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|The Golem]]'' (1913–14).<ref name="irwin">{{ cite book | author-link = Robert Irwin (writer) | author = Irwin, R. | chapter = Introduction | title = The Golem | editor = Gustav Meyrink | others = Mitchell, M. (translator) | location = Sawtry | publisher = Dedalus / Ariadne | year = 1995 | pages = 11–21 | isbn = 1-873982-91-7 }}</ref> ==Early works== [[File:Der heise Soldat Gustav Meyrink.jpg|thumb|Cover of ''[[The Hot Soldier|The Hot Soldier and Other Stories]]'']] During the 1900s Meyrink started publishing satiric [[short stories]] in the magazine ''[[Simplicissimus]]'', signing them with his mother's surname. During spring 1903 Meyrink's first book, ''[[The Hot Soldier|The Hot Soldier and Other Stories]]'', was published. Approximately at the same time he relocated to [[Vienna]]. Almost immediately after his arrival he published another compilation of his short stories, ''The Orchid. Strange stories''. On 8 May 1905 Meyrink married Philomene Bernt, whom he had known since 1896. On 16 July 1906 his daughter Sybille Felizitas was born. On 17 January 1908, two days before Meyrink's fortieth birthday, the second son, Harro Fortunat, was born. Subsequently, the main character of the second Meyrink's novel ''The Green Face'' was given the same name. In 1908 the third compilation of short stories, ''Waxworks'', was published. Being in need of money, Meyrink started working as a translator, and he became a prolific one; during five years he managed to translate into German fifteen volumes of [[Charles Dickens]], as well as work by [[Rudyard Kipling]] and [[Lafcadio Hearn]].<ref name="fr">{{ cite book | author = Rottensteiner, F. | author-link = Franz Rottensteiner | chapter = Afterword | title = The Green Face | editor = Gustav Meyrink | others = Mitchell, M. (translator) | location = Sawtry | publisher = Dedalus / Ariadne | year = 1992 | pages = 218–224 | isbn = 0-946626-92-8 }}</ref> He continued translating until his death, including various occult works and even the Egyptian ''[[Book of the Dead]]''. Meyrink also edited a series of books on the occult. In 1911 Meyrink relocated with his family to the little Bavarian town [[Starnberg]], and in 1913 the book ''Des deutschen Spießers Wunderhorn'' (''The German Philistine's Magic Horn'') was published in Munich. It was a compilation of short stories from the previous three books and several new ones; the title is a parody of ''[[Des Knaben Wunderhorn]]''. Many of these stories had satirical styles, ridiculing institutions such as the army and the church; Austrian writer [[Karl Kraus (writer)|Karl Kraus]] would later describe Meyrink's work as combining "[[Buddhism]] with a dislike for the infantry".<ref name="fr" /> ==Fame== In 1915 the first and most famous of Meyrink's novels, ''The Golem'', was published, though its drafts may be traced back to 1908. The novel is based on the Jewish legend about a rabbi who made a living being known as a [[golem]] (גולם) out of [[clay]] and animated it with a Kabbalistic spell, although these legends have little to do with the story's plotline. The main character is Athanasius Pernath, a contemporary [[lapidary]] from Prague. It is left to the reader to decide whether Pernath is simply writing down his hallucinations or gradually becoming a real golem. Frenschkowski describes ''the Golem'' as both "a deep-footed initiatory tale and an [[urban fantasy]]".<ref name="mf" /> The novel was a great commercial success. In 1916 one more compilation of short stories, ''Bats'', and soon a second novel, ''[[The Green Face]]'', was published. The next year his third novel, ''Walpurgis Night'', was written. The success of these works caused Meyrink to be ranked as one of the three main German-language supernatural fiction authors (along with [[Hanns Heinz Ewers]] and [[Karl Hans Strobl]]).<ref>{{ cite encyclopedia | author = Bloch, R. N. | title = German Literature,(supernatural) | editor1-first = S. T. | editor1-last = Joshi | editor2-first = S. R. | editor2-last = Dziemianowicz | encyclopedia = Supernatural Literature of the World: An Encyclopedia | location = Westport, CT | publisher = Greenwood Press | year = 2005 | isbn = 0-313-32777-7 | pages = 458–461 }}</ref> Meyrink was opposed to World War I (then called the Great War), which caused him to be denounced by German nationalists; the German "[[Völkisch movement|Völkisch]]" journalist Albert Zimmermann (1873-1933) described Meyrink as "one of the cleverest and most dangerous opponents of the German nationalist ideal. He will influence – and corrupt – thousands upon thousands, just as [[Heinrich Heine|Heine]] did".<ref name="dgd">{{cite book | author = Daviau, D. G. | title = Major Figures of Austrian Literature: The Interwar Years 1918–1938 | year = 1996 | location = Riverside, CA | publisher = Ariadne Press | isbn = 978-0-929497-60-0 | page = [https://archive.org/details/majorfiguresofau00davi/page/284 284] | url = https://archive.org/details/majorfiguresofau00davi/page/284 }}</ref><ref name="ml">{{ cite encyclopedia | author = Lube, Manfred| title = Gustav Meyrink als Literat in Prag, Wien und Munchen. | editor= Zondergeld, Rein A. | encyclopedia = Phaïcon: Almanach der phantastischen Literatur | location = Frankfurt-am-Main | publisher= Suhrkamp | year = 1978 | pages = 70–82 }}</ref> In 1916 ''Des deutschen Spießers Wunderhorn'' was banned in Austria.<ref name="dgd" /> By 1920 Meyrink's financial affairs improved so that he bought a [[villa]] in [[Starnberg]]. The villa became known as "The House at the Last Lantern" after the name of the house from ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|The Golem]]''. There he and his family lived for the next eight years and two more works – ''The White Dominican'' and Meyrink's longest novel ''[[The Angel of the West Window]]'' – were written.<ref name="ml" /> In 1927 Meyrink formally converted to [[Mahayana Buddhism]].<ref name="mf" /> ==Death== During the winter of 1931, while skiing, Meyrink's son seriously injured his backbone and for the rest of his life he was confined to his armchair. On 12 July, at the age of 24, he committed suicide – at the same age his father was going to do it. Meyrink survived his son by half a year. He died on 4 December 1932 in [[Starnberg]], Bavaria, Germany.<ref name="irwin" /> In his final days he was suffering from acute shortness of breath as a result of [[dropsy]]. His wife reported that he told her that he wanted to die quite consciously ({{Lang|de|Ich will ganz bewusst sterben}}). He then removed his shirt, spread his arms and died looking out a window at the rising sun.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Birven |first=Henri |url={{Google books|j3D2DwAAQBAJ|page=79|plainurl=yes}} |title=Gustav Meyrink als magisch-esoterischer Dichter. Zur Einführung in die Probleme seiner Romane |publisher=H. Frietsch Verlag |year=2020 |isbn=978-3-937-59237-4 |location=Gaggenau |pages=79–80 |language=de |trans-title=Gustav Meyrink as a Magical-Esoteric Poet. An Introduction to the Problems of His Novels}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Heißerer |first=Dirk |url={{Google books|S-_qSIdiixoC|page=76|plainurl=yes}} |title=Wo die Geister wandern: literarische Spaziergänge durch Schwabing |publisher=C.H. Beck |year=2008 |isbn=978-3-406-56835-0 |location=Munich |page=76 |language=de |trans-title=Where the Spirits Roam: Literary Strolls through Schwabing}}</ref> He is buried in Starnberg Cemetery. ==Reputation== Frenschkowski notes "like those of most other German and Austrian fantastic writers, his books were [[List of authors banned during the Third Reich|prohibited]] during the [[Nazi]] era".<ref name="mf" /> Later, Meyrink's work enjoyed a revival; Meyrink was discussed in a special edition of the French journal ''L'Herne'' (1976),<ref name="mf" /> and his work was translated into Spanish, French, Russian, Portuguese, Dutch and English.<ref name="mf" /> ==Bibliography== * ''[[The Hot Soldier|The Hot Soldier and Other Stories]]'' (''Der heiße Soldat und andere Geschichten''), 1903 * ''Orchideen. Sonderbare Geschichten'', 1904 * ''The Waxworks'', 1907 * “Der Stein der Tiefe,” fragment published in the literary and art journal ''Pan'', 1911 * ''The German Philistine's Horn'' (''Des deutschen Spießers Wunderhorn''), 1909 * ''Der Violette Tod'', 1913 * ''[[The Golem (Meyrink)|The Golem]]'' (''Der Golem''), serialized in 1913/1914, published in novel form in 1915 * ''Bats'' (''Fledermäuse''), 1916 * ''[[The Green Face]]'' (''Das grüne Gesicht''), 1916 * ''Walpurgis Night'' (''Walpurgisnacht''), 1917 * ''Der Mann auf der Flasche'', 1920 * ''The Land of the Time-Leeches'' (''J.H. Obereits Besuch bei den Zeit-Egeln''), 1916 * ''The White Dominican'' (''Der weiße Dominikaner''), 1921 * ''At the Threshold of the Beyond'', 1923 * ''Goldmachergeschichten'', August Scherl Verlag, Berlin 1925 * ''Die Heimtückischen Champagnons und Andere Geschichten'', 1925 * ''Meister Leonhard'', 1925 * ''[[The Angel of the West Window]]'' (''Der Engel vom westlichen Fenster''), 1927 * ''Der Uhrmacher'', 1937 (published posthumous) ==References== {{Reflist}} ==Further reading== * Binder, Hartmut. ''Gustav Meyrink – Ein Leben im Bann der Magie'' [Gustav Meyrink – Life under the Spell of Magic], Vitalis, 2009, {{ISBN|978-3-89919-078-6}} * Mitchell, Mike. ''[[Vivo: The Life of Gustav Meyrink]]'', Dedalus Ltd, 2008, {{ISBN|1-903517-69-9}} * Montiel, Luis. "Aweysha: Spiritual Epidemics and Psychic Contagion in the Works of Gustav Meyrink". In: Rütten, Th.; King, M., Eds., ''Contagionism and Contagious diseases. Medicine and Literature 1880-1933'', Berlin: De Gruyter, 2013, {{ISBN|978-3110305722}}, p. 167-183 * Montiel, Luis: ''El rizoma oculto de la psicología profunda. Gustav Meyrink y Carl Gustav Jung'', Frenia, 2012, {{ISBN|978-84-695-3540-0}} * Paul, R. F. "Esoterrica: A Review of Gustav Meyrink's ''The Green Face''". ''Esoterra'' 4 (Winter-Spring 1994), p. 28-31 *Aster, Evelin: ''Personalbibiolographie von Gustav Meyrink'' (Bern, Frankfurt/M., Las Vegas: Peter Lang, 1980) * Wistrand, Sten: "Gustav Meyrink’s The Golem. A Sensationalist Shlock Novel or an Esoteric Vision of the World?" LIR.journal, nr 12 (2020), p. 11-52. http://ojs.ub.gu.se/ojs/index.php/LIRJ/article/view/4873 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230208100733/https://ojs.ub.gu.se/ojs/index.php/LIRJ/article/view/4873 |date=2023-02-08 }} * Wistrand, Sten: The Revenge of the Uncanny: Gustav Meyrink’s The Golem and the Question of Genre. I: The Uncanny in Language, Literature and Culture (ed. Sarah Stollman, Charlie Jorge and Catherine Morris). Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2024, p. 88–112. ==External links== {{sister project links|n=no|wikt=no|b=no|v=no|commons=Gustav Meyrink|s=yes|author=yes|d=Q78511}} * {{Gutenberg author | id=35032| name=Gustav Meyrink}} * {{Internet Archive author |sname=Gustav Meyrink}} * {{Librivox author |id=167}} * [http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/authors/Gustav_Meyrink.htm Photo and bibliography] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20041224030018/http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/M/Meyrink.html Allrefer.com entry] * {{IMDb name|id=0583723|name=Gustav Meyrink}} * [http://www.dedalusbooks.com/ Dedalus Books] publishers of Meyrink in English * [https://web.archive.org/web/20071229055203/http://www.another-galaxy.com/meyrink.htm Bolognese Tears] English translation of Meyrink short story * [http://www.simplicissimus.info Simplicissimus] Complete edition online {{Gustav Meyrink}} {{Authority control}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Meyrink, Gustav}} [[Category:1868 births]] [[Category:1932 deaths]] [[Category:Writers from Vienna]] [[Category:20th-century Austrian novelists]] [[Category:Austrian male novelists]] [[Category:Austrian male short story writers]] [[Category:Austrian satirists]] [[Category:Austrian pacifists]] [[Category:Austrian Buddhists]] [[Category:Austrian fantasy writers]] [[Category:Austrian horror writers]] [[Category:Buddhist pacifists]] [[Category:Converts to Buddhism]] [[Category:Magic realism writers]] [[Category:Mahayana Buddhism writers]] [[Category:20th-century Austrian short story writers]] [[Category:20th-century Austrian male writers]] [[Category:Weird fiction writers]] [[Category:20th-century pseudonymous writers]] [[Category:Writers from Austria-Hungary]]
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