Hyperion (magazine)
Appearance
Founder | Franz Blei Carl Sternheim |
---|---|
First issue | 1908 |
Final issue | 1910 |
Country | Germany |
Based in | Munich |
Language | German |
Hyperion was a German bimonthly literary magazine published out of Munich by Franz Blei and Carl Sternheim. Between 1908 and 1910, twelve booklets in ten editions appeared.
It was an expensively produced booklet with modern graphics created by Walter Tiemann. Not only were major authors published in the magazine, but also unknown and first-published authors.
The first eight prose works of Franz Kafka appeared in the magazine: The Trees (Die Bäume), Clothes (Kleider), The Rejection (Die Abweisung), The Businessman (Der Kaufmann), Absent-minded Window-gazing (Zerstreutes Hinausschaun), The Way Home (Der Nachhauseweg), Passers-by (Die Vorüberlaufenden) and On the Tram (Der Fahrgast).[1]
Artists and writers
[edit]Artists
[edit]Writers
[edit]- Franz Blei
- Rudolf Borchardt
- Max Brod
- Hans Carossa
- Paul Claudel
- Carl Einstein
- André Gide
- Hugo von Hofmannsthal
- Franz Kafka
- Heinrich Mann
- George Meredith
- Robert Musil
- Rainer Maria Rilke
- René Schickele
- Carl Sternheim
References
[edit]- ^ Kafka, Franz. The Complete Stories. New York: Schocken Books, 1995 p. 472-473.
- ^ Nord und Sud v139 1910 Alfred Mayer p35 Alfred Mayer-München: Heinrich Kley Hyperion, die inzwischen wieder eingegangene literarische Zeit- schrift Münchens, hat sich in München mit der Einführung zweier eminenten Zeichnerbegabungen ein schönes Andenken gesichert. Max Mayr shofer und Heinrich Kley traten, beide nicht mehr in der Jahre Maienblühe stehend, als reife Künstler in die Reihe der bedeutenden deutschen Graphiker.
Categories:
- 1908 establishments in Germany
- 1910 disestablishments in Germany
- Bi-monthly magazines published in Germany
- Defunct literary magazines published in Germany
- German-language magazines
- Magazines established in 1908
- Magazines disestablished in 1910
- Magazines published in Munich
- Literary magazines published in Europe stubs