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Dutch-German art historian, literary critic and linguist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johannes Andreas Jolles, known as André Jolles (August 7, 1874, in Den Helder, Netherlands – February 22, 1946, in Leipzig, Germany) was a Dutch-German art historian, literary critic and linguist who was affiliated with the Nazi Party.[citation needed] He is best known for his work Simple Forms.[1]
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Jolles was born on August 7, 1874, in Den Helder. His father, Hendrik Jolle Jolles, died on February 25, 1888, in Naples.[citation needed] Jolles grew up as an only child with his mother Jacoba Cornelia Singles (1847–1901) in Amsterdam.[citation needed]
In the 1890s, he worked on magazines such as Van Nu en Straks and De Kroniek in 1893 and 1895 respectively, and was the editor for art and science at De Telegraaf from 1897 to 1898.[citation needed] He studied Egyptian and Semitic languages in Paris and Amsterdam from 1893 to 1894 and again in 1899 at the University of Leiden.[citation needed]
In 1896, Jolles met Johan Huizinga in Groningen, who became a long-time friend. On a trip to Italy with Huizinga in 1899, he met his future wife Mathilde Tilli Mönckeberg (1879–1958).[citation needed] They married in September 1900. Their first son, Hendrik, was born in June 1901 but died a year later. After that, they had five children: Jeltje, Jacoba, Jan Andries, Matthijs and Ruth.[2]
Jolles, who became wealthy after his mother's death in 1901, began studying at the University of Freiburg im Breisgau, where he received his doctorate on August 3, 1905, with a thesis on Vitruvian aesthetics with Otto Puchstein. He gave his habilitation lecture, "On the narrative and the descriptive element in the fine arts in antiquity and the Middle Ages" in Freiburg (January 1907), and his habilitation thesis, The Egyptian-Mycenaean Ceremonial Vessels, appeared in 1908. Additionally, he co-wrote the pieces Vielliebchen and Alkestis with Carl Mönckeberg,[3] both of which were staged in Hamburg.[clarification needed][citation needed]
His family moved to Berlin in 1908, where he taught from 1909 as a private lecturer on ancient art history at Friedrich-Wilhelm University.[citation needed]
When World War I began, he registered as a 40-year-old and became a Dutch volunteer. An artillery regiment accepted him after several rejections. Jolles was naturalised and initially participated in the First World War as a soldier and finally as a lieutenant in the Landwehr.[citation needed] In 1916, as an officer in the occupying forces, he accepted a professorship in classical archaeology and art history at the University of Ghent. In 1920, he was sentenced in absentia to 15 years of forced labour in Ghent.[citation needed] While in Ghent, he lived with Margarethe Grittli Boecklen (1895–1967). After he divorced Mönckeberg, he married Boecklen in August 1918, shortly after the birth of their first child Barbara.
Jolles became a professor in Flemish and Dutch language and literature at Leipzig University. In 1923 he also became the professor of comparative history of literature.[citation needed]
In 1930, he published his main work Simple Forms (Einfache Formen), in which he set out a typology of oral narrative forms (myth, legend, fairy tale, memorable, case, riddle, saying, joke). As stated in the preface, the book originated from Jolles' lectures, which Drs. Elisabeth Kutzer and Otto Görner wrote down and edited. Jolles' further considerations about the art forms were not substantial enough to be published.[citation needed]
Simple Forms place Jolles in the company of Ernst Cassirer, Vladimir Propp, and other precursors of Structuralism. Using anthropology and literary theory, they investigated the origins of aesthetics. The book was translated into English only in 2017, "too late", in the words of Fredric Jameson.[4]
On May 1, 1933, he joined the Nazi Party, estranging several friends and his children from his first marriage: Jeltje was married to a Jewish engineer, and Jan Andries was forced to go into exile as a communist to South America under a Spanish Passport with the alias ‘Manuel Enrique Cazón Arribar’. In 1937, Jolles joined the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) – the intelligence agency of the Nazi Party and the SS. He retired in 1941, and from 1942 worked on a study on behalf of the SD on Freemasonry. On his 70th birthday, he received the Goethe Medal for Art and Science from Hitler in 1944.[citation needed]
On a questionnaire he filled out in May 1945 about his Nazi past, it is noted in handwriting: "is still a Nazi – too old (71 years) to be arrested". André Jolles committed suicide on February 22, 1946.[citation needed]
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