Alfred Döblin

born Aug. 10, 1878, Stettin, Ger.
died June 26, 1957, Emmendingen, near
Freiburg im Breisgau, W.Ger.
German novelist and essayist, the
most talented narrative writer of the
German Expressionist movement.
Döblin studied medicine and became a
doctor, practicing psychiatry in the
workers’ district of the Alexanderplatz
in Berlin. His Jewish ancestry and
socialist views obliged him to leave
Germany for France in 1933 after the
Nazi takeover, and in 1940 he escaped to
the United States, where he converted to
Roman Catholicism in 1941. He returned
to Germany in 1945 at the war’s end to
work for the Allied occupying powers,
but he resettled in Paris in the early
1950s. He was seeking treatment in
Germany for ill health when he died.
Although Döblin’s technique and style
vary, the urge to expose the hollowness
of a civilization heading toward its own
destruction and a quasi-religious urge
to provide a means of salvation for
suffering humanity were two of his
constant preoccupations. His first
successful novel, Die drei Sprünge des
Wang-lun (1915; The Three Leaps of
Wang-lun), is set in China and describes
a rebellion that is crushed by the
tyrannical power of the state.
Wallenstein (1920) is a historical
novel, and Berge, Meere und Giganten
(1924; “Mountains, Seas, and Giants”;
republished as Giganten in 1932) is a
merciless anti-utopian satire.
Döblin’s best-known and most
Expressionistic novel, Berlin
Alexanderplatz (1929; Alexanderplatz,
Berlin), tells the story of Franz
Biberkopf, a Berlin proletarian who
tries to rehabilitate himself after his
release from jail but undergoes a series
of vicissitudes, many of them violent
and squalid, before he can finally
attain a normal life. The book combines
interior monologue (in colloquial
language and Berlin slang) with a
somewhat cinematic technique to create a
compelling rhythm that dramatizes the
human condition in a disintegrating
social order.
Döblin’s subsequent books, which
continue to focus on individuals
destroyed by opposing social forces,
include Babylonische Wandrung (1934;
“Babylonian Wandering”), sometimes
described as a late masterwork of German
Surrealism; Pardon wird nicht gegeben
(1935; Men Without Mercy); and two
unsuccessful trilogies of historical
novels. He also wrote essays on
political and literary topics, and his
Reise in Polen (1926; Journey to Poland)
is a stimulating travel account. Döblin
recounted his flight from France in 1940
and his observations of postwar Germany
in the book Schicksalsreise (1949;
Destiny’s Journey).