The brothers Heinrich and Julius Hart were German writers and literary critics who collaborated closely. They were among the pioneers of naturalism in German literature.
Heinrich was born 30 December 1855, in Wesel and died 11 June 1906, in Tecklenburg. Julius was born 9 April 1859, in Münster and died 7 July 1930, in Berlin.
The Hart brothers published works of literary criticism, notably Kritische Waffengänge (parts 1–6, 1882–1884), in which they opposed the light reading chosen by the bourgeoisie.
Works
- Hart, J. Sansara (1879)
- Hart, J. The Triumph of Life (1898)
- Hart, H. Gesammelte Werke, vols. 1–4. Berlin (1907)
- Hart, J. Revolution der Ästhetik. Berlin (1908)
- Hart, H. Song of Humanity, an attempt to depict the panorama of man's development from ancient times. He finished only three "songs":
- "Tul and Nahila" (1888)
- "Nimrod" (1888)
- "Moses" (1896)
References
- Hart, Heinrich and Julius at the Great Soviet Encyclopedia. Accessed April 1013
- Jürgen, I. Der Theaterkritiker Julius Hart. Berlin, 1956. (Dissertation.)
- Literature by and about Heinrich and Julius Hart in the German National Library catalogue
- Secondary literature on Heinrich and Julius Hart Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
- List of works by the Hart brothers
- Modern poet-characters in Zeno.org
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.