A
Land of Poets, Music
Composers & Thinkers
Germany
is often known as das Land der Dichteru
und Denker (the land of poets and
thinkers). German culture began
long before the rise of Germany
as a nation-state and spanned the
entire German speaking world.
Literature
German literature can be
traced back to the Middle Ages,
with the most notable authors of
the period being Walther von der
Vogelweide and Wolfram von Eschenbach.
The Nibelungenlied, whose author
remains unknown, is also an important
work of the epoch, as is the Thidrekssaga.
The fairy tales collections published
by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm became
famous throughout the world. Theologian
Luther, who translated the Bible
into German, is widely credited
for having set the basis for modern
"High German" language.
Among the most admired German poets
and authors are Lessing, Goethe,
Schiller, Kleist, Hoffmann, Brecht
and Schmidt. Four 20th century authors
have won the Nobel Prize in literature:
Thomas Mann, Hermann Hesse, Heinrich
Böll and Günter Grass.
Philosophy and the history
of ideas
Germany's influence on philosophy
is historically significant and
pie notable German philosophers
have helped shape western philosophy
as early as the Middle Ages (Albertus
Magnus). Later, Leibniz (17th century)
and most importantly Kant played
central roles in the history of
philosophy. Kantianism inspired
the work of Schopenhauer as well
as German idealism defended by Fichte
and Hegel. Marx and Engels developed
communist theory in the second half
of the 19th century while Nietzsche,
Heidegger and Gadamer pursued the
tradition of German philosophy in
the 20th century. A number of German
intellectuals were also influential
in sociology, most notably Habermas,
Horkheimer, Adorno (three central
figures in the Frankfurt School),
Tönnies, Simmel, Weber, and
Luhmann. The Humboldt University
of Berlin founded in 1810 by linguist
and philosopher Wilhelm von Humboldt
served as an influential model for
a number of modern Western universities.
Music
In the field of music, Germany claims
some of the most renowned classic
composers of the world including
Bach, and Beethoven, who marked
the transition between the Classical
and Romantic eras in Western classical
music. Other composers of international
fame include Handel, Telemann, Mendelssohn
Bartholdy, Brahms, Schumann, Wagner,
Strauss and Orff.
As of 2006, Germany is the fifth
largest music market in the world
and has exerted a strong influence
on Pop and Rock music. Artists such
as Herbert Grönemeyer, Nena,
Dieter Bohlen, Modern Talking, and
Peter Schilling have enjoyed international
fame. German musicians and, particularly,
the pioneering bands Tangerine Dream
and Kraftwerk have also contributed
to the development of electronic
music.
Germany hosts many large rock music
festivals annualy. The Rock am Ring
festival is the largest music festival
in Germany, and among the largest
in the world.
Cinema
German cinema dates back to the
very early years of the medium with
the work of Max Skladanowsky. It
was particularly influential during
the years of the Weimar Republic
with German expressionists such
as Robert Wiene and Friedrich Wilhelm
Murnau. The Nazi era produced mostly
propaganda films although the work
of Leni Riefenstahl still introduced
new aesthetics in film. From the
1960s, New German Cinema directors
such as Volker Schlöndorff,
Werner Herzog, Wim Wenders, Rainer
Werner Fassbinder placed West-German
cinema back onto the international
stage with their often provocative
films, while the Deutsche Film-Aktiengesellschaft
controlled film production in the
GDR. More recently, films such as
Das Boot (1981), Run Lola Run (1998),
Das Experiment (2001), Good Bye
Lenin! (2003), Gegen die Wand (Head-on)
(2004) and Der Untergang (Downfall)
(2004) have enjoyed international
success. In 2007 the Academy Award
for Best Foreign Language Film went
to F.H. von Donnersmarck's The Lives
of Others. The Berlin Film Festival,
held yearly since 1951, is one of
the world's foremost film festivals.[4]
Fine arts and decorative arts
Important German Renaissance painters
include Albrecht Altdorfer, Lucas
Cranach the Elder, Matthias Grünewald,
Hans Holbein the Younger and the
well-known Albrecht Dürer.
The most important Baroque artists
from Germany are Cosmas Damian Asam.
Further artists are the romantic
Caspar David Friedrich, the surrealist
Max Ernst, the conceptualist Joseph
Beuys or the neo-expressionist Georg
Baselitz.
Architectural contributions from
Germany include the Carolingian
and Ottonian styles, important precursors
of Romanesque. The region then produced
significant works in styles such
as the Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque.
The nation was particularly important
in the early modern movement through
the Deutscher Werkbund and the Bauhaus
movement identified with Walter
Gropius.
The Nazis closed these movements
and favoured a type of neo-classicism.
Since World War II, further important
modern and post-modern structures
have been built, particularly since
the reunification of Berlin.
Religious tradition
The German government has limited
responsibilities for culture, which
is devolved to the states of Germany,
called Länder.
As much as 64.3 percent of the German
population belongs to Christian
denominations. 31.4 percent are
Roman Catholic and 30.8 percent
are affiliated to the protestant
Evangelical Church in Germany[5]
(the figures are known accurately
because Germany imposes a church
tax on those who disclose a religious
affiliation). The North and East
is predominantly Protestant, the
South and West rather Catholic.
Nowadays there is a non-religious
majority in Hamburg and the East
German states. Germany formed a
substantial part of the Roman Catholic
Holy Roman Empire, but was also
the source of Protestant reformers
such as Martin Luther.
Historically, Germany had a substantial
Jewish population. Only a few thousand
people of Jewish origin remained
in Germany after the Holocaust,
but the German Jewish community
now has approximately 100,000 members,
many from the former Soviet Union.
Germany also has a substantial Muslim
minority, most of whom are from
Turkey.
German theologians include Luther,
Schleiermacher, Feuerbach, and Rudolf
Otto. Also Germany brought up many
mystics including Meister Eckhart
and Rudolf Steiner.
Academic landmarks
Germany is home to some of the finest
academic centers in Europe. Some
famous Universities include those
of both Munich and Berlin, University
of Tübingen, University of
Göttingen, University of Marburg,
University of Berlin, Heidelberg
University, Mining Academy Freiberg
and Freiburg University, among many
others.
Since about 1970, Germany has once
again had a thriving popular culture,
now increasingly being led by its
new-old capital Berlin and the city
of Hamburg, and a self-confident
music and art scene. Germany is
also very well known for its many
renowned opera houses, such as The
Semperoper, The Komische Oper Berlin
and The Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz.
Cuisine
German cuisine varies from region
to region, but concentrates on meat
(especially sausage) and varieties
of sweet dessert and cakes (such
as Black Forest gateau Schwarzwälder
Kirschtorte) and Stollen (a fruit
cake). Germans also are famous for
rye bread. Germany also produces
a large quantity of beer, and (mostly
white) wine, particularly Riesling,
but also Müller-Thurgau and
other varieties.
German cuisine is very similar to
English and American cuisine and
also to the cooking styles of its
immediate neighbors (Holland, France,
Austria, Poland). Although sausage
is the most famous food product
from Germany, one could not gain
much understanding of German cuisine
by reducing it to sausage. In Germany
it is mostly consumed as a snack
(Bratwurst), at barbecues and it
also appears in a few dishes.
A stereotypical German dish contains
a type of meat (typically pork,
beef or poultry), a type of potatoes
(mashed, fried, as dumplings or
boiled) and a type of vegetable
(typically peas, carrots or cabbage)
and sauce. The "home cuisine"
differs very much from the "restaurant
cuisine". In restaurants you
will find more traditional dishes.
Cuisine differs also greatly according
to regions (in the north you eat
fish, in the Rhine region you replace
beer with wine, in Bavaria you eat
roasted pork) and season (in spring
you eat white asparagus with ham
and sauce hollandaise, in fall you
eat green cabbage with a special
kind of sausage and mustard and
in winter/for Christmas you eat
duck or goose with red cabbage,
dumplings and brown gravy).