Jochen Schmidt (born 9 November 1970 in East Berlin)[1] is a German author and translator. Initially, Schmidt gained popularity in Germany with his story “Harnusch mäht als wär’s ein Tanz” (English "Harnusch mows the lawn as if it were a dance") for which he was awarded the Open Mic Prize of the Literary Workshop Berlin (Literaturwerkstatt Berlin).[2] In 2007, he was a finalist for the prestigious Ingeborg Bachmann Prize.
His books to date include four novels, three volumes of short stories,[3] and a highly respected book on Marcel Proust. He is an active member of the German National Authors' Soccer Team ("Autonama," Deutsche Autorennationalmannschaft).[4]
Jochen Schmidt is the son of two linguists. Because of the academic, as well as Christian orientation of his family, they displayed a certain distance to the GDR regime. Until the eighth grade, Schmidt attended a "Polytechnische Oberschule" (POS) in Berlin-Buch, and from 1985 until his Abitur, an "Erweiterte Oberschule" for mathematically gifted students.[5]
In 2017, Schmidt shared a literature-related memory with the MDR journalist Claudius Nießen, namely that he had attended the Leipzig Book Fair once during the times of the GDR. Schmidt describes the experience as almost surreal, with the publishing houses from West Germany putting their books on the tables for display. One thing he did not know at the time, he states, was that a lot of people were stealing the books from the West at the fair.[6]
Following his military service in the NVA,[7] Schmidt began studying Computer Science at the Humboldt University in Berlin, shortly after the Fall of the Wall. Soon after, he changed his subjects at the university to Romance Languages and German Studies, at the Humboldt University, and also in Bukarest. In the context of these studies, he spent time abroad in Brest, Valencia, Rome, New York City, and Moscow.[8] Especially his stays in Brittany, Spain, and the U.S. inspired parts of Schmidt's first novel Müller haut uns raus (engl. Müller bails us out; 2002). After completing his studies, he held a job at the university and worked as a translator into German.[9] It was during this time that he started writing creatively.
In 1999, he was awarded the Open Mic Prize of the Literary Workshop Berlin for his story "Harnusch mäht als wär's ein Tanz." That same year, he became a founding member of the Reading Stage "Chaussee der Enthusiasten" (engl. "Avenue of Enthusiasts") that existed until 2015. The "Chaussee der Enthusiasten" held its reading events initially at the pub die tagung, and later at the RAW Friedrichshain in Berlin. Another location was the Frannz-Club in the Prenzlauer Berg neighborhood. In addition to Schmidt, regulars at the reading stage included Andreas Kampa, Stephan Serin, Robert Naumann, and Dan Richter.[10] Jochen Schmidt's first book publication took place in 2000 with the collection of short prose Triumphgemüse.[11] It appeared with the prestigious publishing house C.H. Beck (Munich). A paperback edition followed from Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag (dtv). In Schmidt's author profile on the website of the International Literary Festival Berlin, we are told that his debut "impresses with its endless series of bizarre characters, parading their brittle dignity. This hyper-realistic examination of numerous episodes from the era following the fall of the Berlin Wall, embedded in a mild melancholia, extracts a laconic power from its characters – as for example in the prize-winning story 'Harnusch mäht als wärs ein Tanz', masterfully giving rhythm to every text."[12]
At the time of the publication of Triumphgemüse, Schmidt gave an interview to Fridtjof Küchemann of the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung in which he admitted that he generally read very little, and if he did, he would read books by "Classics of Modernism." He mentioned Thomas Mann, Heiner Müller, and Thomas Bernhard as models among German-language authors.[13]
Then, in 2002, Jochen Schmidt's first novel follows, Müller haut uns raus, and, interestingly enough, the name of its first-person narrator is Jochen Schmitt -- just one letter in the last name is different. As was the case with his first book, Müller bails us out is first published as a hardback with C.H. Beck, and then as a paperback with dtv. In an effort to determine the genre of Schmidt's novel with greater precision, literary critics have vacillated between "experiential report," picaresque novel, and "the portrait of the artist as a young man."
For more than 40 years, the Piper publishing house in Munich, has maintained a series called "Gebrauchsanweisungen" (engl. user manuals). These "User Manuals" are designed to be travel guides of a special kind.[14] In 2004, very likely by virtue of his intimate knowledge of the place because of his time studying abroad there, Jochen Schmidt published his User Manual for Brittany (Gebrauchsanweisung für die Bretagne) with Piper. He ended up contributing four books to the series so far. After the book on Brittany, Gebrauchsanweisung für Rumänien (User Manual for Romania) appeared in 2013. In 2015, Gebrauchsanweisung für Ostdeutschland followed, and, most recently, Piper published Gebrauchsanweisung fürs Laufen (User Manual for Running) in 2019.
The year 2006 saw the launch of two major projects by Jochen Schmidt. The first project, which stirred a lot of attention to the author, relates to a feeling that a lot of people who enjoy reading may be familiar with: we always have books -- and often they are very long, if not monumental, books -- that we had always wanted to read. One such work was Marcel Proust's seven volumes of In Search of Lost Time. This constituted a major task since, altogether, the seven volumes demand of the reader to read more than 3000 pages. In July 2006, Schmidt started reading twenty pages of Proust's work each day, and contributed a daily entry about what he had read on a blog entitled Schmidt liest Proust (engl. Schmidt reads Proust).[15] Following the completion of the project, the author transformed the contents of the blog into a book that appeared in 2008 with the publishing house Voland & Quist.
The year 2007 brought one of the most decisive events in Schmidt's career, his participation at the prestigious Ingeborg Bachmann Prize in Klagenfurt, Austria.[16] His second collection of short prose, My Most Important Bodily Functions, is published during the same year.[17]
2007: My most important bodily functions2011: Dudenbrooks with the faz.net2013: Schneckenmühle
In an interview with Deutschlandfunk Kultur, journalist Frank Meyer inquired with Schmidt about architecture being a dominant them of his novel A Job for Otto Kwant, (German Ein Auftrag für Otto Kwant) which appeared with the publisher C.H. Beck on 3 April 2019 in Munich.[18] The author responded that architecture had always been one of the means for him to read and understand a city; once we inquire about a building in a city we don't know, we are confronted with our own incompetence, which brings us to ask and read more. "It is similar to botany: the more you know, the more you see."