Helmut Lethen Explained

Helmut Lethen
Birth Name:Helmut Lethen
Birth Date:14 January 1939
Birth Place:Mönchengladbach, Germany
Nationality:German
Alma Mater:
Occupation:
  • professor
  • Germanist
  • cultural scholar
Children:5[1]

Helmut Lethen (born 14 January 1939 in Mönchengladbach, Germany) is a German Germanist and cultural scholar.

Career

Helmut Lethen joined the Bundeswehr as a volunteer after graduating from high school in 1959 and was promoted to lieutenant in the reserves.[2] He studied at universities in Bonn, Amsterdam and Berlin. Lethen was a left wing student activist and was one of the students who disrupted the opening of the Deutscher Germanistentag in West Berlin in 1968. He was a member of the Maoist party KPD-AO until 1975.

Lethen was awarded his doctorate in 1970 on the subject of Neue Sachlichkeit 1924-1932. Studies in the Literature of White Socialism.[3] From 1971 to 1976 he was an assistant at the FU Berlin and from 1977 to 1995 professor in Utrecht; he also held various visiting professorships. In 1995, he was appointed to Rostock, where he was holding a Chair of Modern German Literature from 1996. He became emeritus professor in 2004. From October 2007 to February 2016, he was director of the International Research Centre for Cultural Studies in Vienna.[4] Since 2016, he has held a professorship at the University of Art and Design Linz.

Helmut Lethen became known to a wider audience through his book publications Cool Conduct. The Culture of Distance in Weimar Germany (1994) and Der Sound der Väter (on Gottfried Benn, 2006). In 2014, he received the Leipzig Book Fair Prize in the non-fiction/essay category for Der Schatten des Fotografen.

In October 2020, he published Denn für dieses Leben ist der Mensch nicht schlau genug, his autobiography.[5]

Private life

Lethen was married to Loes Scholtheis (* 1941)[6] from 1964. The couple separated in 1984.[7] He is now married to Caroline Sommerfeld (* 1975), who has been an activist of the Identitarian movement since 2015. The couple has three sons.[8] [9]

Monographies (selection)

References

  1. "Volker Klotz und Helmut Lethen: Goldsucher und Zeichendeuter", wienerzeitung.at, 19 February 2021.
  2. Alexander Cammann: Filterblase mit hohem Esprit. Rezension, in: Die Zeit, 22. February 2018, p. 49.
  3. "Helmut Lethen in Catalogus Professorum Rostochiensium", cpr.uni-rostock.de, 23 January 2018.
  4. "Helmut Lethen", campus.de, retrieved 27 September 2022.
  5. "Ich versuche, aus Enttäuschung Energie zu ziehen", deutschlandfunkkultur.de, 19 October 2020.
  6. [German National Library|DNB]
  7. "Andrea Klimt (2021): Lethen, Helmut", Deutsches Literatur-Lexikon Online, retrieved 27 September 2022.
  8. .
  9. .

Web pages