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Hermann Hesse

My Belief: Essays on Life and Art Hardcover

  • Language English
  • ISBN-10 0374216665
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  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0374216665
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0374216665
  • 20,133 in Essays, Journals & Letters

About the author

Hermann hesse.

Hermann Hesse (1877-1962) was born in Germany and later became a citizen of Switzerland. As a Western man profoundly affected by the mysticism of Eastern thought, he wrote many novels, stories, and essays that bear a vital spiritual force that has captured the imagination and loyalty of many generations of readers. In 1946, he won the Nobel Prize for Literature for The Glass Bead Game.

Photo by unknown [Dutch National Archives, The Hague, Fotocollectie Algemeen Nederlands Persbureau (ANEFO), 1945-1989 / Public Domain] [CC BY-SA 3.0 nl (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/nl/deed.en)], via Wikimedia Commons.

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my belief essays on life and art

MY BELIEF: Essays on Life and Art

by Hermann Hesse ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 22, 1973

Hermann Hesse who lamented the decline of the West and celebrated the journey to the East, whose double-souled heroes are both continually suffering and affirming life, whose novels personify the drama of dualism, the projection of ""the ideal into reality,"" was himself enthralled by two opposing cultural tendencies, the transcendental longings of German Romanticism, in the literary period between 1750 and 1850, and the chaos and plight of the modern world. In these collected essays on life and art, extending from 1904 to 1961, all of Hesse's abundant meditative energy, his proliferation of poles and counterpoles and syntheses, his masterly studies of Dostoevsky and Jean-Paul and Holderlin, his frank and penetrating discussion of moral and political and cultural issues, show him profoundly struggling to overcome the dichotomies of past and present, science and poetry, engendering a unity of belief ""that there are not various peoples and minds but only One Humanity, only One Spirit."" At times both the predicament and the resolve are stated quite baldly: ""The way leads from innocence into guilt, out of guilt into despair, out of despair either to failure or to deliverance: that is, not back again behind morality and culture into a child's paradise but over and beyond these into the ability to live by the strength of one's faith."" But more representative of Hesse's style are those qualities of modesty, delicacy, and tact, the aura of what he calls ""magical thinking,"" which illuminates even the most casual excursion and disarms us by the earnestness and purity of his voice.

Pub Date: Feb. 22, 1973

Page Count: -

Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1973

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  • Publisher Farrar Straus & Giroux
  • Publication date 1974
  • ISBN 10  0374511098
  • ISBN 13  9780374511098
  • Binding Paperback
  • Number of pages 393

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The Marginalian

Hermann Hesse on Little Joys, Breaking the Trance of Busyness, and the Most Important Habit for Living with Presence

By maria popova.

Hermann Hesse on Little Joys, Breaking the Trance of Busyness, and the Most Important Habit for Living with Presence

“Of all ridiculous things the most ridiculous seems to me, to be busy — to be a man who is brisk about his food and his work,” Kierkegaard admonished in 1843 as he contemplated our greatest source of unhappiness . It’s a sobering sentiment against the backdrop of modern life, where the cult of busyness and productivity plays out as the chief drama of our existence — a drama we persistently lament as singular to our time. We reflexively blame on the Internet our corrosive compulsion for doing at the cost of being, forgetting that every technology is a symptom and not, or at least not at first, a cause of our desires and pathologies. Our intentions are the basic infrastructure of our lives, out of which all of our inventions and actions arise. Any real relief from our self-inflicted maladies, therefore, must come not from combatting the symptoms but from inquiring into and rewiring the causes that have tilted the human spirit toward those pathologies — causes as evident to Kierkegaard long ago as to any contemporary person who crumbles into bed at night having completed the day’s lengthy to-do list yet feeling like a thoroughly incomplete human being.

How to heal that aching spirit is what Hermann Hesse (July 2, 1877–August 9, 1962) addresses in a spectacular 1905 essay titled “On Little Joys,” found in My Belief: Essays on Life and Art ( public library ) — the out-of-print treasure that gave us the beloved writer and Nobel laureate on the three types of readers and why the book will never lose its magic .

my belief essays on life and art

More than a century before our present whirlpool of streaming urgencies, Hesse writes:

Great masses of people these days live out their lives in a dull and loveless stupor. Sensitive persons find our inartistic manner of existence oppressive and painful, and they withdraw from sight… I believe what we lack is joy. The ardor that a heightened awareness imparts to life, the conception of life as a happy thing, as a festival… But the high value put upon every minute of time, the idea of hurry-hurry as the most important objective of living, is unquestionably the most dangerous enemy of joy.

Decades before the German philosopher Josef Pieper made his prescient case for liberating leisure and human dignity from the clutch of workaholism , Hesse laments how modern life’s “aggressive haste” — and what a perfect phrase that is — has “done away with what meager leisure we had.” He writes:

Our ways of enjoying ourselves are hardly less irritating and nerve-racking than the pressure of our work. “As much as possible, as fast as possible” is the motto. And so there is more and more entertainment and less and less joy… This morbid pursuit of enjoyment [is] spurred on by constant dissatisfaction and yet perpetually satiated.

Noting that he doesn’t have a silver bullet for the problem, Hesse offers:

I would simply like to reclaim an old and, alas, quite unfashionable private formula: Moderate enjoyment is double enjoyment. And: Do not overlook the little joys!

A century before psychoanalyst Adam Phillips made his compelling case for the art of missing out and the paradoxical value of our unlived lives , Hesse considers what moderation looks like in the face of seemingly unlimited possibilities for what to do with one’s time, and although the options available have changed in the hundred-some years since, the principle still holds with a firm grip:

In certain circles [moderation] requires courage to miss a première. In wider circles it takes courage not to have read a new publication several weeks after its appearance. In the widest circles of all, one is an object of ridicule if one has not read the daily paper. But I know people who feel no regret at exercising this courage. Let not the man * who subscribes to a weekly theater series feel that he is losing something if he makes use of it only every other week. I guarantee: he will gain. Let anyone who is accustomed to looking at a great many pictures in an exhibition try just once, if he is still capable of it, spending an hour or more in front of a single masterpiece and content himself with that for the day. He will be the gainer by it. Let the omnivorous reader try the same sort of thing. Sometimes he will be annoyed at not being able to join in conversation about some publication; occasionally he will cause smiles. But soon he will know better and do the smiling himself. And let any man who cannot bring himself to use any other kind of restraint try to make a habit of going to bed at ten o’clock at least once a week. He will be amazed at how richly this small sacrifice of time and pleasure will be rewarded.

Learning this difference between binging on stimulation and savoring enjoyment in small doses, Hesse argues, is what sets part those who live with a sense of fulfillment from those who romp through life perpetually dissatisfied. He writes:

The ability to cherish the “little joy” is intimately connected with the habit of moderation. For this ability, originally natural to every man, presupposes certain things which in modern daily life have largely become obscured or lost, mainly a measure of cheerfulness, of love, and of poesy. These little joys … are so inconspicuous and scattered so liberally throughout our daily lives that the dull minds of countless workers hardly notice them. They are not outstanding, they are not advertised, they cost no money!

my belief essays on life and art

He points to the most readily available, most habitually overlooked of those joys — our everyday contact with nature. A century before throngs of screen zombies began swarming the sidewalks of modern cities, Hesse writes:

Our eyes, above all those misused, overstrained eyes of modern man, can be, if only we are willing, an inexhaustible source of pleasure. When I walk to work in the morning I see many workers who have just crawled sleepily out of bed, hurrying in both directions, shivering along the streets. Most of them walk fast and keep their eyes on the pavement, or at most on the clothes and faces of the passers-by. Heads up, dear friends!

Hesse offers his prescription for breaking this trance of busyness and inattention:

Just try it once — a tree, or at least a considerable section of sky, is to be seen anywhere. It does not even have to be blue sky; in some way or another the light of the sun always makes itself felt. Accustom yourself every morning to look for a moment at the sky and suddenly you will be aware of the air around you, the scent of morning freshness that is bestowed on you between sleep and labor. You will find every day that the gable of every house has its own particular look, its own special lighting. Pay it some heed if you will have for the rest of the day a remnant of satisfaction and a touch of coexistence with nature. Gradually and without effort the eye trains itself to transmit many small delights, to contemplate nature and the city streets, to appreciate the inexhaustible fun of daily life. From there on to the fully trained artistic eye is the smaller half of the journey; the principal thing is the beginning, the opening of the eyes.

In a sentiment which Annie Dillard would come to echo many decades later in her beautiful meditation on reclaiming our capacity for joy and wonder , Hesse adds:

A stretch of sky, a garden wall overhung by green branches, a strong horse, a handsome dog, a group of children, a beautiful face — why should we be willing to be robbed of all this? Whoever has acquired the knack can in the space of a block see precious things without losing a minute’s time… All things have their vivid aspects, even the uninteresting or ugly; one must only want to see. And with seeing come cheerfulness and love and poesy. The man who for the first time picks a small flower so that he can have it near him while he works has taken a step toward joy in life.

my belief essays on life and art

Noting that these small joys take the form of different things for each of us, Hesse adds:

[There are] many other small joys, perhaps the especially delightful one of smelling a flower or a piece of fruit, of listening to one’s own or others’ voices, of hearkening to the prattle of children. And a tune being hummed or whistled in the distance, and a thousand other tiny things from which one can weave a bright necklace of little pleasures for one’s life.

He ends with an offering of counsel as valid and vitalizing today as it was a century ago, perhaps even more:

My advice to the person suffering from lack of time and from apathy is this: Seek out each day as many as possible of the small joys, and thriftily save up the larger, more demanding pleasures for holidays and appropriate hours. It is the small joys first of all that are granted us for recreation, for daily relief and disburdenment, not the great ones.

Complement this particular portion of Hesse’s wholly transcendent My Belief with philosopher Alan Watts on how to live with presence , cognitive scientist Alexandra Horowitz on the art of looking with attentive awareness , and this lovely wordless picture-book about living attentively .

— Published March 6, 2017 — https://www.themarginalian.org/2017/03/06/hermann-hesse-little-joys-my-belief/ —

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  1. My belief : essays on life and art : Hesse, Hermann, 1877-1962 : Free

    My belief : essays on life and art Bookreader Item Preview ... Essays, 1904-1961 -- pt. 2.: I. European and American literature -- II. Intellectual history -- III. Oriental literature Access-restricted-item true Addeddate 2022-06-11 07:07:19 Associated-names

  2. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    Each letter and essay delves into some of the deepest realms of human thought - the quest self-knowledge, psychology, mysticism, religion (Buddhism, Zen, Hinduism, Christianity), war, and, the ebb and flow of civilisations past and present, and the role of art and the poet in society.

  3. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    My Belief: Essays on Life and Art is a collection of essays by Hermann Hesse. The essays, written between 1904 and 1961, were originally published in German, either individually or in various collections between 1951 and 1973. This collection in English was first published in 1974, ...

  4. My belief by Hermann Hesse

    An edition of My belief: essays on life and art (1974) My belief by ... My belief: essays onlife and art : edited, and with an introduction by Theodore Ziolkowski, translated by Denver Lindley, with two essays translated by Ralph Manheim 1974, Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  5. My Belief

    From: My Belief: Essays on Life and Art, Hermann Hesse, New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1974, pp. 177-180 Translated by Denver Lindley Edited and introduced by Theodore Ziolkowki Posted as an educational and public service by The Hermann-Hesse-Page (HHP) at the University of California, Santa Barbara GG

  6. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    My Belief: Essays on Life and Art. Hermann Hesse. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1974 - English essays - 393 pages "Arrays the opposing forces in over one hundred maps, pictures and orders of battle--the historical backgrounds, the terrain and armaments, the personalities, the weaknesses of the leaders on both sides--then pauses at crucial stages ...

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  8. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    Education. 2008. At the end of the main part of Hermann Hesse's classic novel The Glass Bead Game, the central character, Joseph Knecht, dies suddenly. This paper considers the educational significance of Hesse's…. Expand.

  9. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art (English and German Edition)

    Each letter and essay delves into some of the deepest realms of human thought - the quest self-knowledge, psychology, mysticism, religion (Buddhism, Zen, Hinduism, Christianity), war, and, the ebb and flow of civilisations past and present, and the role of art and the poet in society.

  10. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art Paperback

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  12. My Belief by Hermann Hesse

    My Belief: Essays on Life and Art is a collection of essays by Hermann Hesse. The essays, written between 1904 and 1961, were originally published in German, either individually or in various collections between 1951 and 1973. This collection in English was first published in 1976, edited by Theodore Ziolkowski. ...

  13. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    About the author (1989) Hermann Hesse (July 2, 1877 -- August 9, 1962) was a German poet, novelist, essayist and painter. His best-known works included Steppenwolf, Siddhartha, and The Glass Bead Game, each of which explores an individual's search for authenticity, self-knowledge and spirituality. In 1946, he received the Nobel Prize in Literature.

  14. MY BELIEF: Essays on Life and Art

    Hermann Hesse who lamented the decline of the West and celebrated the journey to the East, whose double-souled heroes are both continually suffering and affirming life, whose novels personify the drama of dualism, the projection of ""the ideal into reality,"" was himself enthralled by two opposing cultural tendencies, the transcendental longings of German Romanticism, in the literary period ...

  15. My belief by Hermann Hesse

    My belief essays on life and art ... My belief: essays onlife and art : edited, and with an introduction by Theodore Ziolkowski, translated by Denver Lindley, with two essays translated by Ralph Manheim 1974, Farrar, Straus and Giroux Hardcover in English. 0374216665 9780374216665 ...

  16. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art (English and German Edition

    My Belief: Essays on Life and Art (English and German Edition) by Hesse, Hermann - ISBN 10: 0374511098 - ISBN 13: 9780374511098 - Farrar Straus & Giroux - 1974 - Softcover

  17. My Belief: Essays on Life and Art

    My Belief: Essays on Life and Art is a collection of essays by Hermann Hesse. The essays, written between 1904 and 1961, were originally published in German, either individually or in various collections between 1951 and 1973. This collection in English was first published in 1976, edited by Theodore Ziolkowski. ...

  18. Hermann Hesse on Little Joys, Breaking the Trance of Busyness, and the

    How to heal that aching spirit is what Hermann Hesse (July 2, 1877-August 9, 1962) addresses in a spectacular 1905 essay titled "On Little Joys," found in My Belief: Essays on Life and Art (public library) — the out-of-print treasure that gave us the beloved writer and Nobel laureate on the three types of readers and why the book will ...

  19. My Belief; Essays on Life and Art Paperback

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