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      • According to Norse mythology, Steppenwolf is the son of the god Loki and the giantess Angrboda. Steppenwolf is depicted as a powerful and fierce warrior with the strength and ferocity of a wolf. Steppenwolf is often associated with the Norse god Odin, who is also associated with wolves.
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  2. In Norse mythology, Steppenwolf is the son of Loki and the giantess Angrboda. Loki is a complex and multi-faceted figure in Norse mythology, known for his cunning and trickery. Angrboda, on the other hand, is a giantess associated with the underworld and the mother of several powerful creatures in Norse mythology.

  3. Steppenwolf is a New God who is the younger brother of Heggra (Darkseid's mother) and the uncle of Uxas (Darkseid). He is also a member of Darkseid's Elite. He leads the military forces of Apokolips and rides hounds bred for battle. Steppenwolf is one of the earliest survivors of Doomsday, the monster who once killed Superman.

  4. Steppenwolf, novel by Hermann Hesse, published as Der Steppenwolf in 1927. The title refers to a style adopted by Harry Haller, Hesse’s protagonist. Haller is a writer, a loner and an outsider who thinks of himself as a wolf of the steppes.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. About Steppenwolf. Hermann Hesse's novel Steppenwolf addresses division within the self and society, and the effects such divisions can have on an individual, such as loneliness, self-mutilation, and possible suicide. The novel is constructed from a manuscript that the principal character, Harry Haller, or Steppenwolf, leaves behind at a ...

  6. In her essay on Der Steppenwolf Mary E. Stewart states that Hesse's use of the motif of a suprahuman phenomenon "reflects the concern of many of [his] contemporaries to find some kind of timeless essence to set against the unanchored subjectivity of individual experience: Joyce's 'epiphanies' [and] Thomas Mann's interest in mythology." Hesse's ...

  7. Steppenwolf (originally Der Steppenwolf) is the tenth novel by German-Swiss author Hermann Hesse . Originally published in Germany in 1927, it was first translated into English in 1929. The novel was named after the German name for the steppe wolf. The story in large part reflects a profound crisis in Hesse's spiritual world during the 1920s.

  8. The beauty of the novel Steppenwolf is seen it its heroic struggle with the gods of the Underworld within one’s own soul. Modern man, personified by Harry Haller, must learn to recognize his shadow, his dark side, to accept it as his brother, to integrate and assimilate it into himself.

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