Uvo Hölscher


Uvo Hölscher was a German classical philologist.

Life

Uvo Hölscher was born, the younger of his parents' two recorded sons, in Halle. His father, Gustav Hölscher was a theologian. His mother, born Borghild Gjessing, was the daughter of a school director from Oslo. His grandfather, :de:Wilhelm Hölscher|Wilhelm Hölscher, was also a theologian.
Uvo Hölscher attended secondary schools in Marburg and Bonn. He moved on to Tübingen and Munich universities where he studied natural sciences and cultural sciences, then progressing to Frankfurt where he studied classical philology, enthused in particular by the lecturer Karl Reinhardt. It was at Reinhardt's regular Saturday morning gatherings that he met Max Kommerell and his student contemporary :de:Dorothea Hölscher-Lohmeyer|Dorothea Lohmeyer, whom in 1940 he married. In 1937 he received his doctorate for a dissertation on "The Philosophy of Empedocles", supervised for the work by Reinhardt. The next day he was conscripted for his military service. He nevertheless managed to receive his habilitation in 1944, during a brief vacation with Bruno Snell in Hamburg. However, his dissertation, which concerned the use of the Ekkyklema machine in Greek drama, was not published and he was obliged to provide the party with a statement that he would never apply to become a professor. After the war ended he was imprisoned under conditions that became particularly harsh after he tried to escape.
He was released in 1946 and his habilitation was re-awarded, this time at Munich where for a time he was the sole representative of his discipline at the university, till he was joined by Friedrich Klingner and Rudolf Pfeiffer. After a period in England, in 1954 Hölscher was appointed a professor at the recently launched Free University of Berlin. He transferred to Heidelberg in 1962 and then, in 1970, returned as a professor to Munich.
Hölscher's work followed the trajectory set by his mentor, Karl Reinhardt. His work covered early Greek epic poetry, especially that of Homer, and Pre-Socratic philosophy. His best known book is a justification for classical philology, "Die Chance des Unbehagens - Zur Situation der klassischen Studien" . His formulation of the "adjacent stranger" is often cited when describing the relationship between the modern age and antiquity. His most important work is "Die Odyssee - Epos zwischen Märchen und Roman" .

Memberships and honours