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Hyperion (Hlderlin novel)

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Wikipedia article




'Hyperion' is an epistolary novel by German poet Friedrich Hlderlin. Originally published in two volumes in 1797 (Volume 1) and 1799 (Volume 2), respectively, the full title is 'Hyperion; or, The Hermit in Greece' (German: "'Hyperion; oder, Der Eremit in Griechenland'"). Each volume is divided into two books, with each second book including an epigraph from Sophocles. The work is told in the form of letters from the protagonist, Hyperion, to his German friend Bellarmin, alongside a few letters between Hyperion and his love Diotima in the second volume of the novel, and is noted for its philosophical classicism and expressive imagery.

Origin



Hlderlin began working on 'Hyperion' in 1792, as a 22-year-old student at the Tbinger Stift. He further developed it while serving as a Hofmeister on the estate of Charlotte von Kalb, and put finishing touches to the novel while receiving lectures from Johann Gottlieb Fichte at the University of Jena.

Plot



'Hyperion' is set in Greece and deals with invisible forces, conflicts, beauty, and hope. It recounts Hyperion's attempts to overthrow the Turkish rule in Greece (in one of the footnotes Hlderlin specifically ties events in the novel with the Russians "bringing a fleet into the Archipelago" in 1770, framing the novel's events into the Orlov Revolt), his disillusionment with the rebellion, survival in the deadly Battle of Chesma, his devastation when Diotima dies of a broken heart before they can be reunited and his subsequent life as a hermit in the Greek wilderness, where he embraces the beauty of nature and overcomes the tragedy of his solitude. In the same time Hyperion after all these losses understands the limits of his idealized concept of Greece. An impossibility to travel becomes the essence of his travel.

Legacy



The work contains 'Hyperions Schicksalslied' ("Hyperion's Song of Fate"), an interpolated poem on which Johannes Brahms composed the 'Schicksalslied', Op. 54 between 1869 and 1871.

In Arnold Fanck's 1926 film Der Heilige Berg, Leni Riefenstahl's character Diotima is named after Hyperion's love.

Between 1960-1969 the Italian composer and conductor Bruno Maderna composed the opera 'Hyperion' after Hlderlin's novel.

The Italian composer Luigi Nono included passages from 'Hyperion' in his work 'Fragmente-Stille, an Diotima' for string quartet as part of the score to be "sung" silently by the performers while playing the piece.

In 1983, the German sculptor Angela Laich created a sculpture named Hyperion, after the main character of the Hlderlin novel.

'Hyperion' is included in the 2006 literary reference book '1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die'.

English translations of 'Hyperion'



* 'Hyperion or The Hermit in Greece' translated by Willard R. Trask (Frederick Ungar Publishing Co., 1965)

* 'Hyperion' translated by Ross Benjamin (Archipelago Books, 2008)

* 'Hyperion or the Hermit in Greece' translated by India Russell (Melrose Books, 2016)

* 'Hyperion or the Hermit in Greece' translated by Howard Gaskill (Open Book Publishers, 2019)

References



Category:1797 novels

Category:1799 novels

Category:18th-century German novels

Category:Fiction set in 1770

Category:Novels set in the 1770s

Category:Epistolary novels

Category:German-language novels

Category:Novels set in Greece

Category:Works by Friedrich Hlderlin

Category:Orlov revolt

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