Steppenwolf
By
Publisher Description
Written during one of the lowest points in German author Herman Hesse’s life, Steppenwolf is a rumination on the eternal outsider—the individual who cannot find joy in society and for whom isolation brings only psychic torment.
The novel’s protagonist Harry Haller believes he is split into two beings: the civilized “man” and the instinctual “wolf.” Throughout the novel, Hesse goes to great lengths to dispel this myth, positing through multiple characters that the self is multi-faceted and that the illusion of duality is what traps Haller in his misery. The novel operates on several layers of literary irony: its name is derived from the German steppe wolf despite taking place entirely in a dense urban environment, the manuscript itself is presented as a manuscript written by protagonist Henry Haller with commentary by his landlady’s nephew, and the narrative is a showcase for isolationist thought and debaucherous decline while ostensibly keeping the cosmic door open for change and redemption. It is this final aspect that Hesse felt was the most misunderstood, lamenting in later editions that readers focused too heavily on the tragic elements of Henry Haller’s life without considering underlying possibility of transcendence and recovery. Ultimately, Hesse’s clarity on the dangers of self-isolation acts as a tonic to a modern world beset by isolation and individualism.
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About Hermann Hesse
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