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  1. Stefan Anton George ( German: [ˈʃtɛfan ˈʔantoːn ɡeˈ (ʔ)ɔʁɡə]; 12 July 1868 – 4 December 1933) was a German symbolist poet and a translator of Dante Alighieri, William Shakespeare, Hesiod, and Charles Baudelaire.

  2. Stefan George (born July 12, 1868, Büdesheim, near Bingen, Hesse [Germany]—died Dec. 4, 1933, Minusio, near Locarno, Switz.) was a lyric poet responsible in part for the emergence of Aestheticism in German poetry at the close of the 19th century.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. May 29, 2018 · The German symbolist poet Stefan George (1868-1933) strongly influenced a group of brilliant and idealistic disciples, thus manifesting his revolt against the materialism of his time. Born in Rüdesheim near Bingen on the Rhine, Stefan George graduated from a gymnasium in Darmstadt and spent several years traveling throughout western Europe.

  4. Summary. PDF Cite. Stefan George was probably the strongest defender in Germany of the art for art’s sake thesis, and his sense of the aesthetic was strong enough to lead him to write his first...

  5. GEORGE, STEFAN (1868–1933) BIBLIOGRAPHY. German poet and intellectual. The life and career of Stefan George are an especially acute example of the fickleness of fame. At his death on 4 December 1933 he was not only the most famous poet in Germany, but he was also revered as the leader of a cultural and quasi-political movement—what he ...

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  7. The Works of Stefan George on JSTOR. OPEN ACCESS. OLGA MARX. ERNST MORWITZ. Series: Volume: 78. Copyright Date: 1974. Edition: 2. Published by: University of North Carolina Press. Pages: 464. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5149/9781469657875_marx. Select all. (For EndNote, Zotero, Mendeley) (For BibTex) Front Matter (pp. i-viii)

  8. S tefan G eorge (1868–1933) is one of the three pre-eminent German poets of his time. Together with Hugo von Hofmannsthal and Rainer Maria Rilke, he initiated the revival of German poetry at the turn of the century and put an end to the “Sing-Sang Mode” of post-Romantic German poetry (Glöckner 81) written by poets such as Friedrich Bodenstedt (1819–1892), Adolf von Schack (1815–1894 ...

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