Gustav Kühne

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Gustav Kühne, 1868.
Gustav Kühne

Ferdinand Gustav Kühne (born  December 27, 1806 in Magdeburg , †  April 22, 1888 in Dresden ) was a German writer and literary critic and was added to Young Germany .

At the age of twelve, Gustav Kühne and his family moved from Magdeburg to Berlin , where he attended the Joachimsthal Gymnasium . There he met the later Young German writer Theodor Mundt , with whom he had a lifelong friendship. From 1826 to 1830 studied Kühne in Berlin with Friedrich Schleiermacher and Friedrich Hegel 1830 philosophy and a doctorate in Erlangen Dr. phil. In 1841 he married Henriette Harkort, the daughter of the mining engineer and officer Eduard Harkort . In 1856 he and his family moved to Dresden , where he died in 1888.

Activity as a journalist and literary critic

From 1831 Kühne initially worked for various magazines such as the Prussian State Newspaper and its supplement magazine for foreign literature , the yearbooks for scientific criticism , the sheets for literary entertainment and the literary Zodiacus . In 1835 he succeeded Heinrich Laube as editor of the newspaper for the elegant world , in 1846 he succeeded his friend August Lewald as editor of the magazine Europa, Chronik der Bildungswelt . From 1859 Kühne turned entirely to his own literary work.

Literary activity

As early as 1831 Kühne published a first volume of novellas . In 1835 his first novel A quarantine in the madhouse was published . From this time he was added to the wider circle of "Young Germany". His relationship with the authors of this so-called “school”, especially with Karl Gutzkow , who panned his first novel, remained tense. Kühne had a particularly positive relationship with Mundt and Wienbarg . After Kühne was mentioned in Menzel's literary journal as a critic of Junge Deutschland and was spared the publication ban imposed on most young German writers in 1835, Ludwig Börne publicly invited him to make a commitment to new German literature, which Kühne did. As a result, his first monastery novella was banned by the censors in 1837. From the early 1840s, Kühne wrote several dramas, including, for example, The Dublin Conspiracy . In creating this and other works against the background of Irish history, he received support from Ottilie von Goethe , Goethe's daughter-in-law, with whom he had a lifelong friendship. In 1848 he was a member of the preliminary parliament . During the revolution of 1848 Kühne wrote several articles about the political events. He published a collection of these articles in 1863 under the title My diary in a moving time . From 1862 he put together a collection of his writings in 12 volumes.

Works

  • A quarantine in the madhouse . Leipzig 1835.
  • Monastery novels (2 volumes). Leipzig 1838 ( archive.org ; also appeared under the title: Raoul , archive.org ).
  • Female and male characters . Leipzig 1838 ( Vol. 2  - Internet Archive ).
  • The rebels of Ireland . Leipzig 1840 ( archive.org ).
  • Sospiri. Leaves from Venice . G. Westermann, Braunschweig 1841.
  • Portraits and silhouettes . Hanover 1843 ( archive.org ).
  • The Freemasons. Roman (= German Library. Collection of selected original novels , edited by Otto Müller, Vol. V). Meidinger, Frankfurt am Main 1855 ( archive.org ).
  • The Dublin Conspiracy. Mayer, Leipzig 1856.
  • From Mejican prisons, fragments of papers left by Eduard Harkort . Lorck, Leipzig 1858
  • Schiller book . Blochmann and Ernst, Dresden 1860 ( digitized version )
  • Collected writings (12 volumes). Leipzig / Berlin 1862–1867
  • My diary in turbulent times . Leipzig / Berlin 1863 ( archive.org ).
  • German characters (4 volumes). Leipzig / Berlin 1864-65 ( Vol. 1  - Internet Archive , Vol. 3  - Internet Archive , Vol. 4  - Internet Archive ).
  • Wittenberg and Rome (3 volumes). Berlin 1877.

literature

  • Petra Hartmann : Faust and Don Juan. A merging process, illustrated by the authors: Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Nikolaus Lenau, Christian Dietrich Grabbe, Gustav Kühne and Theodor Mundt. ibidem, Stuttgart 1998, ISBN 3-932602-29-3 .
  • Kurt Haß: Gustav Kühne as editor of "Europa" (1846-1859). Humanitas, Wiesbaden 1973, ISBN 3-7997-0212-1 .
  • Karsten Hein: Ottilie von Goethe (1796–1872). Biography and literary relationships of Goethe's daughter-in-law (= European university publications. Series 1: German Language and Literature , Volume 1782). Lang , Frankfurt am Main et al. 2001, ISBN 3-631-37438-0 (dissertation University of Düsseldorf 2000, 398 pages).
  • Fritz MartiniKühne, Gustav. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 13, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 1982, ISBN 3-428-00194-X , p. 198 f. ( Digitized version ).
  • Edgard Pierson (Ed.): Gustav Kühne. His life picture and correspondence with contemporaries. With a foreword by Wolfgang Kirchbach . Pierson, Dresden et al. 1889.
  • Edgard Pierson (Hrsg.): Felt and thought. Loose leaves from Gustav Kühne's writings. Pierson, Dresden et al. 1890
  • Johannes ProelßKühne, Gustav . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 51, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1906, pp. 431-435.

Web links

Wikisource: Gustav Kühne  - Sources and full texts

Individual evidence

  1. https://docplayer.org/6308989-2-sammlkag-von-namensunterschriften-d-member-d-vorparlamentes-1848.html