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© Autograf 150 years Thomas Mann

150 years of Thomas Mann

Thomas Mann was born 150 years ago and is one of Germany's most important writers of the 20th century. As a Nobel Prize winner and political commentator, he has left a lasting literary legacy. In this issue, we take a look at his work and life to discover the man behind the famous novels. Join us and explore the many facets of Thomas Mann. What moved him? Where did he draw his inspiration from? And why is he still relevant today?

Between two Worlds Bourgeois and Artist Thomas Mann

Thomas Mann grappled with it his entire life – this inner tension between bourgeois existence and his calling as an artist. We explore a conflict that shaped his literary work more than anything else.

Foto (Detail): © picture alliance / Mary Evans Picture Library Film still from “Death in Venice” by Luchino Visconti (Björn Andresen and Dirk Bogarde)

Position Thomas Mann and the struggle against the enemies of freedom

For democracy to triumph, it must fight, declared Nobel Prize laureate Thomas Mann over 80 years ago. Even today, merely invoking the values of tolerance and freedom is not enough.

Photo (detail): JJ Shev; © Unsplash Photo: dark birds in front of a light backgroundmonstrators protest in New York against the Italian intervention in the Spanish Civil War. The inscription on their protest signs refers to a quote by the writer Thomas Mann against the war

For beginners Reading tips for the “Magic Mountain”

Thomas Mann’s novel “The Magic Mountain” has the reputation of being a book for “true intellectuals”. It need not be quite so daunting, however: we have some tips for the less scholarly inclined and for Thomas Mann novices determined to give this literary classic a chance.

Photo (detail): Etienne Bösiger; © Unsplash High Mountain

A special relationship Thomas Mann and Italy

Thomas Mann returned to Italy, the wellspring of his creativity, throughout his life. Yet despite Italy being a source of inspiration, his writings present a surprisingly sombre portrait of the country.

Foto (Detail): © ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Thomas-Mann-Archiv / Fotograf: Unbekannt / TMA_4887 Photo postcard “Grandhôtel des Bains” – Venice, Lido; in the background a large building, in front of it a body of water with numerous people bathing and two Venetian gondolas

Slideshow At home with Thomas Mann

From Lübeck to Los Angeles: Thomas Mann’s life story took him from Europe to the USA and back again. Our slideshow gives you an insight into the many different places where the Mann family lived.

© Autograf / Tobias Schrank Graphic in shades of grey, showing a drawing by Thomas Mann on the left and a section of a world map in the remaining part of the image. In North America and Europe, Thomas Mann's places of residence (Lübeck, Munich, Zurich, Princeton and Los Angeles) are labelled and lines indicate the route Thomas Mann took from one place to another.

A life with Thomas Mann The Tel Aviv Doctor and his Love of “The Magic Mountain”

Michael Siedner reads a little Thomas Mann every day. During a visit to the Goethe-Institut Tel Aviv, he reveals why this particular German author means so much to him.

Foto: Cedric Dorin © Goethe-Institut Israel Michael Siedner sitting in front of his piano and the picture of Thomas Mann

Spotify Playlist „Thomas Mann’s favourite Records“

The American music critic and author Alex Ross has published a list of the music titles that Thomas Mann called “his favourite records“ in the Saturday Review of Literature in 1948. Listen to recent recordings of these works here!

Photo (detail): © ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Thomas-Mann-Archiv / Fotograf: Unbekannt / TMA_0076 Photo (detail): © ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Thomas-Mann-Archiv / Fotograf: Unbekannt / TMA_0076 Thomas Mann, half-profile to the left, with folded arms, standing at a record player, looking down.

Mann's life Nobel laureate in literature and “later” democrat

Thomas Mann wrote great literature all his life. Almost three decades after the publication of "Buddenbrooks", the writer received the Nobel Prize for Literature for his debut novel on 10th December 1929.
 

Photo (detail): © picture alliance/United Archives | 91050/United_Archives/TopFoto Thomas Mann

Julia Mann Thomas Mann’s Brazilian Mom

After years of negotiations, the establishment of a cultural centre in Julia Mann's birthplace in Paraty, Brazil, remains uncertain. Experts have noted the importance of an institution dedicated to the Manns, as Julia Mann played a key role in shaping the lives of Thomas and Heinrich Mann.

Photo (Detail): ETH-Bibliothek Zürich, Thomas-Mann-Archiv / Fotograf: Unbekannt / TMA_0005 Portrait of  Julia Mann with children

Mann 2025 Events Calendar and Information

The “Mann 2025” website is the the global platform for festivities and critical reflections on Thomas Mann’s enduring literary and political legacy.

Mann2025.de

Mann and Kafka An interrupted round of golf

Thomas Mann never met Franz Kafka, but he was an avid reader of his works. How, then, did Mann discover Kafka, how did he interpret him, and what role did an interrupted round of golf have in it all? Find out in this article by writer and philosopher Grzegorz Jankowicz.

Photo (detail): Mahadev Ittina © Unsplash Golf club and ball in the grass

The Magic Mountain A trick of self-development

Theodor W. Adorno recommended that readers of Thomas Mann's novel should forego the arduous task of deciphering the symbols and instead read the work three times. The author Katarzyna Trzeciak writes about why it is worth considering this suggestion.

Photo (detail): © picture-alliance / akg-images | akg-images Theodor Adorno

The Buddenbrooks Family Affairs

In the summer of 1900, Thomas Mann sent a handwritten copy of Buddenbrooks to the publisher Samuel Fischer. Małgorzata Łukasiewicz takes a close look at this work and deciphers it to uncover Mann’s ideas.

Photo (detail): picture alliance / ullstein bild Katia Mann with her children Klaus, Erika, Golo and Monika (1916)

Reading experience “The Magic Mountain” as bedtime reading

The Polish literary critic Justyna Sobolewska describes how she sinks into the plot of the novel “The Magic Mountain”. 

Photo: Tobias Schrank A woman in the background Mountains