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Ernest Jünger.
Ernst
Jünger, the son of a wealthy chemist, was born in Heidelburg, Germany,
on 29th March, 1895. At the age of seventeen he ran away from home to
join the Foreign Legion. His father brought him back but he returned
to military service when he joined the German
Army on the outbreak of the First World War.
Jünger
fought on the Western Front and was wounded
at Les Epares in 1915. He recovered and in November he was promoted
to the rank of lieutenant. After the Battle of
the Somme Jünger was awarded the Iron
Cross and is transferred to Divisional Intelligence as a reconnaissance
officer.
In
1917 Jünger fought at Cambrai and later
that year is wounded while leading an attack on French trenches. After
recovering from his injuries he took part in the Spring
Offensive. After leading another attack, for which he won the Pour
le Merite, he was seriously wounded, he spent the rest of the war in
a military hospital.
In
1920 Jünger published his first book, The
Storm of Steel. Its glorification
of war made it a popular with Germany's young people who dreamed of
gaining revenge after the country's disastrous defeat in 1918.
Jünger
studied
zoology, geology and botany before becoming a full-time writer. His
books included Das Abenteurliche Herz
(1929) and Der Arbeiter (1932).
His
work was very popular with members of the Nazi
Party and after Adolf
Hitler
came
to power in 1933 he was offered a seat in the Reichstag.
Although he supported the party he refused the offer and concentrated
on his writing. His later books included and Blatter
und Steine (1934) and On the Marble
Cliffs (1939).
Jünger
joined the German Army on the outbreak
of the Second World War and served on the staff
of the military command in occupied France where he was involved in
the planning of Operation Sealion. In 1942
was transferred to the Soviet Union.
Jünger
became
increasingly critical of the atrocities committed by the Schutz
Staffeinel (SS)
in occupied Europe and was dismissed from the army after the July
Plot. His son, who was also in the army, was arrested for organizing
subversive discussions in his unit. After being found guilty he was
sent to a punishment battalion and was killed in Carrara in Italy in
November, 1944.
His
criticisms of Adolf
Hitler
and
his totalitarian system, appeared in his book The
Peace (1948). His war diaries, Strahlungen
(1949) were also critical of Nazi Germany.
Jünger
also
published the novels Heliopolis
(1949), Die Eberjagd (1952),
Besuch auf Goldenholm (1952), Zie
Zwille (1973) and Eumeswil
(1977). Ernst Jünger died
on 17th February, 1998.
Ernst
Jünger.org
Ernst
Jünger: Wikipedia
Ernst
Jünger: Litweb
Ernst
Jünger: Books and Writers
Ernst
Jünger: Spartacus Biography
Forum
Debates
War
Propaganda Bureau
The
Novel that Changed Your Life
Who
is the most important writer of the early 20th century?
Ernst
Jünger
(1)
Ernst
Jünger,
The Storm of Steel (1919)
Left of us was the great railway embankment
in the line Ecoust-Croisilles, which we had to cross, rose out of the
mist. From loopholes and dugout windows built into the side of it rifles
and machine-guns were rattling merrily. I strode on in a fury over the
black and torn-up ground, from which rose the suffocating gas of our
shells. I was entirely alone.
Then I caught sight of the first of the enemy. A figure crouched, wounded
apparently, three metres in front of me in the middle of the pounded
hollow of the road. I saw him start at the sight of me and stare at
me with wide-open eyes as I walked slowly up to him holding out my revolver
in front of me. A drama without an audience was ready. To me the mere
sight of an enemy in tangible form was a release. Grinding my teeth,
I pressed the muzzle to the temple of this wretch, whom terror had now
crippled, and with my other hand gripped hold of my tunic. With a beseeching
cry he snatched a photograph from his pocket and held it before my eyes...
himself, surrounded by a numerous family. I forced down my mad rage
and walked past.
(2)
Ernst Jünger, The Storm
of Steel (1919)
Now I looked back:
four years of development in the midst of a generation predestined to
death, spent in caves, smoke-filled trenches, and shell-illuminated
wastes; years enlivened only by the pleasures of mercenary, and nights
of guard after guard in an endless perspective; in short, a monotonous
calendar full of hardships and privation, divided by the red-letter
days of battles.
Hardened as scarcely another generation ever was in fire and flame,
we could go into life as though from the anvil; into friendship, love,
politics, professions, into all that destiny had in store. It is not
every generation that is so favoured.