“The task of a writer consists of being able to make something out of an idea.” – Thomas Mann
Born June 6, 1875 Mann won the Nobel Prize for his symbolic and ironic novels and novellas, noted for their insight and exemplary development of “the idea.” Among the first to speak out against Naziism and Adolph Hitler, he fled Germany – the country of his birth and where he did much of his writing – to exile to Britain in the mid-1930s. In 1936 his German citizenship was revoked and Mann became an even more active crusader against the Nazis, creating a series of BBC broadcasts speaking out against the repressive regime.
He lived his final years in Switzerland and died in Zurich in 1955.
“The writer's joy is the thought that can become emotion,” he said, “and conversely in seeing how the emotion can wholly become a thought.”
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