Friedrich M. Fels

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Friedrich M. Fels (born as Friedrich Mayer , probably 1864 in Dürkheim ; died after 1899) was a German journalist who made a name for himself in the area around Young Vienna . He published on Friedrich Nietzsche and Charles Sealsfield .

Life

Almost nothing is known about his origin, even his birth name cannot be determined with certainty. Around 1890 he studied law for a few semesters in Munich. But he will graduate in a different place. In 1891 he worked as an editor for the magazine Moderne Rundschau , published by Eduard Michael Kafka , and was involved in setting up a "Free Stage" in Vienna as its chairman. He also gives the programmatic lecture Die Moderne , which was published in the same year. In 1893 his literary friends Richard Beer-Hofmann , Arthur Schnitzler , and Hugo von Hofmannsthal finance a spa stay in Merano for him . In June 1895 he moved to Zurich , where he added a two-part feature section to the Neue Zürcher Nachrichten that summer and lived with Hugo Bettauer . As a result, his track is lost, only a smaller article can be traced in 1899.

Works

(Chronologically, as "Friedrich M. Fels", not otherwise indicated)

  • We earthly. In: On the beautiful Blue Danube , 1890, p. 153 ( online )
  • How to get famous. A true story. In: On the beautiful blue Danube, 1890, pp. 217–221 ( online )
  • The modern. In: Moderne Rundschau, 4 (1891), pp. 79–81.
  • And yet ... In: On the beautiful Blue Danube, 1891 ( online )
  • From new novels , [about Michael Georg Conrad , Egestorff, Baron Torresani, Hermann Menkes]. In: Moderne Rundschau , October 1, 1891, p. 260
  • The Hungarian National Theater. In: Wiener Mondags-Journal , October 3, 1892 ( online )
  • FMF: »Mother!« By Heinz Tovote . In: Allgemeine Kunst-Chronik, November 15, 1892, p. 614. ( online )
  • FMF: » Anatol « by Arthur Schnitzler. In: Allgemeine Kunst-Chronik, November 15, 1892, p. 614. ( online )
  • Friedr. M. Fels: Friedrich Nietzsche . In: Wiener Allgemeine Zeitung , No. 4988, October 26, 1894, pp. 2-3.
  • New Sealsfield letters. In: Die Presse , April 11, 1895, pp. 1–2. ( online )
  • A theologian on the "aesthetics of poetry". In: Neue Revue, Vol. 6, No. 16, April 17, 1895, pp. 490–495. (via Laurenz Müllner )
  • Aesthetic questions of time. In: Neue Revue, Vol. 6, No. 21, May 22, 1895, pp. 656–660.
  • Sign of the times . In: Die Presse , 10. – 11. July 1895 ( online )
  • Charles Sealsfield: The Cabin Book or National Characteristics. Edited and introduced by Friedrich M. Fels. With the portrait of Sealsfield. Reclams Universal Library , No. 3404, August 1895.
  • Shakespeare or Bacon . In: Neue Revue, Vol. 6, No. 37, August 28, 1895, p. 1099–
  • Dr. Friedr. M. Fels: The folk songs of the Bulgarians. In: Neue Revue, Vol. 6, No. 50, December 11, 1895, pp. 1583–1586.
  • Friedr. M. Fels: Jakob Burckhardt on the culture of the Greeks. In: Deutsche Rundschau, Volume 98, January – March 1899, pp. 300–312 ( online )

literature

  • Christian Benne: So spoke Confusius: A forgotten chapter from Nietzsche's early Viennese reception. In: Orbis Litterarum, Vol. 57 (2002) H. 5, 370-402. doi : 10.1034 / j.1600-0730.2002.570503.x
  • Dirk Niefanger: Nietzsche Readings in Viennese Modernism. In: Friedrich Nietzsche and the literature of classical modernism Ed. Valk Thorsten, Berlin: De Gruyter, 2009. 41–54.
  • Gotthart Wunberg (Ed.): The young Vienna: Austrian literary and art criticism 1887–1902. I-II. Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1976. ISBN 3-484-10220-9

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Arthur Schnitzler: Diary. Retrieved October 17, 2019 .
  2. ^ A b Ludwig Maximilians University Munich: Official directory of the staff of teachers, civil servants and students at the royal Bavarian Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. May 1, 1890, Retrieved October 9, 2019 .
  3. ANNO, Neues Wiener Tagblatt (daily edition), 1891-07-08, page 5. Accessed on May 28, 2019 .
  4. See the correspondence between Schnitzler and Hofmannsthal, ed. Heinrich Schnitzler and Therese Nickl (there, however, several pieces of correspondence dated incorrectly) and the Hermann Bahr / Arthur Schnitzler correspondence (Göttingen 2018), also online: Fels