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Swedish Academy The Permanent Secretary |
Press Release
Born in 1905, in the port of Rustschuk on
the lower Danube, Elias Canetti belongs to a Sephardic
family whose members, in 1492, were driven out of the town of
Canete, situated between Cuenca and Valencia. For several hundred
years, the family lived in Turkey, but in the course of time,
settled in Bulgaria. In 1911, Elias Canetti went to England with
his parents; after his father's sudden and premature death in
1913 - a catastrophe which has been of decisive importance to him
- the family moved to Vienna. Between the years 1916 and 1924,
Elias Canetti attended schools in Zürich and
Frankfurt-am-Main. He then studied science in Vienna, the result
being a doctorate in chemistry in 1929. Ever since then he has
devoted himself exclusively to writing. In 1938 he went to
France; sometime later, he moved over to London, which has
remained his place of residence through the years.
When surveyed, Elias Canetti's literary work may seem split up,
comprising as it does of so many genres. His oeuvre consists of a
novel, three plays, several volumes of notes and aphorisms, a
profound examination of the origin, structures and effect of the
mass movement, a travel book, portraits of authors, character
studies, and memoirs; but these writings, pursued in such
different directions, are held together by a most original and
vigorously profiled personality.
The exiled and cosmopolitian author, Canetti has one native land,
and that is the German language. He has never abandoned it, and
he has often avowed his love of the highest manifestations of the
classical German culture. He has warmly emphasized what Goethe,
for instance, has meant to him as medicina mentis.
His foremost purely fictional achievement is the great novel,
Die Blendung, (Auto da Fé ) published in 1935
and praised then by Thomas Mann
and Hermann Broch. But it can be said to have attained its full
effect during the last decades: against the background of
national socialism's brutal power politics, resulting in a world
conflagration, the novel acquires a deepened perspective.
Die Blendung was part of an originally planned series of
novels which was to take the shape of a "comédie humaine of
the madmen". The book has such fantastic and demoniacal elements
that associations to Russian 19th century writers like Gogol and
Dostoievsky - to whom, by the way, Canetti himself has declared
he owes a debt of gratitude - are apparent. The main scene of the
macabre and grotesque events that the novel discloses is an
apartment house in Vienna. It is an aspect of key importance when
Die Blendung is regarded by several critics as a single
fundamental metaphor for the threat exercised by the "mass man"
within ourselves. Close at hand is the viewpoint from which the
novel stands out as a study of a type of man who isolates himself
in self-sufficient specialization - here, the sinologist Peter
Kien surrounded by his many books - only to succumb helplessly in
a world of ruthlessly harsh realities.
Die Blendung leads over to the big examination of the
origin, composition and reaction patterns of the mass movements
which Canetti, after decades of research and study, published
with Masse und Macht (Crowds and Power, 1960). It
is a magisterial work by a polyhistor who knows how to reveal an
overwhelmingly large number of viewpoints of men's behaviour as
mass beings. By going in particular to the primitive peoples,
their myths and fairytales, Canetti tries to pinpoint the
character of the mass movements. In his field of research he
introduces not only the actual masses but also the imaginary
ones: the masses of "the spirits", "the angels" and "the devils",
which are such important elements in many religions. He explores
the nature and significance of the national mass symbols; with
acumen he illustrates the psychological problems of commands and
obedience. Like Gustave Le Bon, he sees the archaic components in
the mass movements of the new age. In his basically ahistorical
analysis, what he wants to expose and attack by scrutinizing the
origin and nature of the mass is, in the end, the religion of
power. According to Canetti, deep down behind every command,
every exercise of power, is the threat of death. Survival itself
becomes the nucleus of power. At the last, the mortal enemy is
death itself: this is a principal theme, held to with an oddly
pathetic strength, in Elias Canetti's literary works.
Apart from the intensive work on Masse und Macht, Canetti
has written strongly concentrated, aphoristic notes, issued in
several volumes. They usually emanate from concrete situations
which can be regarded as metaphors for something generic. A
satirical bite in the observations of people's behaviour, a
loathing of wars and devastation, bitterness at the thought of
life's brevity are characteristic features of the continuous
notes. By virtue of his abundant wit and stylistic pithiness,
Canetti stands out as one of the foremost aphorists of our time,
a man who, in his phrasing of life's ironies, is sometimes
reminiscent of great predecessors like La Bruyère and
Lichtenberg.
The plays Canetti has written are all of a more or less absurd
kind: Hochzeit (Wedding), 1932, Komödie der
Eitelkeit (The Comedy of Vanity), 1950, Die
Befristeten (The Deadlined), 1956. In their portrayal
of extreme situations, often depicting human vulgarity, these
"acoustic masks", as Canetti calls the plays, are of decided
interest.
With Die Stimmen von Marrakesch (The Voices of
Marrakesh ), 1967, Canetti published a travel book which
shows his keen eye for life in the poor outskirts of existence;
with Der Ohrenzeuge (Earwitness) , 1974, he
presented a collection of "characters" in the spirit of
Theophrastus. Among his literary portrait studies, special
mention can be made of Der andere Prozess (Kafka's
Other Trial) , 1969, in which, with intense involvement, he
examines Kafka's complicated relationship to Felice Bauer. The
study forms itself into a picture of a man whose life and work
meant the relinquishing of power.
Finally, standing out as a peak in Elias Canetti's writings are
his memoirs, so far in two large volumes: Die gerettete
Zunge (The Tongue Set Free), 1977, and Die Fackel
im Ohr (The Torch in the Ear), 1980. In these
recollections of his childhood and youth, he reveals his vigorous
epic power of description to its full extent. A great deal of the
political and cultural life in Central Europe in the early 1900s
- especially the form it took in Vienna - is reflected in the
memoirs. The peculiar environments, the many remarkable human
destinies with which Canetti was confronted, and his unique
educational path - always aiming at universal knowledge - are
seen here in a style and with a lucidity that have very few
qualitative equivalents in the memoirs written in the German
language this century.