Hans Carossa (born Dec. 15, 1878, Tölz, Ger.—died Sept. 12, 1956, Rittsteig, W.Ger.) was a poet and novelist who contributed to the development of the German autobiographical novel.
Carossa’s literary career began with a book of lyric poetry, Stella Mystica (1902; “Mystical Star”), in which a reflective, philosophical attitude dominates the expression of emotions. This attitude of detachment toward his own life and a desire to seek and bring forth the most noble in humankind remains dominant throughout his work. His first novel, Doktor Bürgers Ende (1913; “The End of Doctor Bürger”; revised and republished in 1930 as Die Schicksale Doktor Bürgers, “The Fortunes of Doctor Bürger”), in which a young doctor, driven to despair by the suffering around him, commits suicide when he fails to save the woman he loves, is an exploration of, as well as a variation on, Goethe’s “Werther” theme—Carossa expressed his indebtedness to Goethe in Die Wirkungen Goethes in der Gegenwart (1938; “Goethe’s Influence Today”). Rumänisches Tagebuch (1924; A Roumanian Diary; republished in 1934 as Tagebuch im Kriege, “War Diary”) is an evaluation of Carossa’s observations as an army doctor in Romania during World War I and a probe into the deeper mysteries of life; it was the first of his books to gain recognition outside of Germany.
More directly autobiographical works are Eine Kindheit (1922; A Childhood), Das Jahr der schönen Täuschungen einer Jugend (1941; The Year of Sweet Illusions), and Verwandlungen einer Jugend (1928; Boyhood and Youth). In Ungleiche Welten (1951; “Different Worlds”) Carossa treats his involuntary presidency of the European Writers Association, a National Socialist organization. Carossa’s last and unfinished work, Der Tag des jungen Arztes (1955; “The Day of the Young Doctor”), explores the conflicts between his duties as a physician and his responsibilities as a writer.