Abstract (eng)
Childhood and youth traumata always greatly influence the mindset and path through life of a person; this was no different for Hermann Broch, who was shaped by his experiences from early childhood up to his emigration.
This paper examines the shortcomings of Hermann Broch in relation to his career path, his fraught relationship with authority up until the sale of his father’s companies, his position on Gustave Le Bon’s and Sigmund Freud’s crowd theories, which was dominated by philosophy and lead to his own theory of mass hysteria, his view on death, which is distinctly different to psychotherapeutic views on death, and his childhood neuroses, which impaired his relationships to women.
The unresolved dichotomy between poetry and philosophy remained central to Hermann Broch’s self-concept throughout his life. As a result, the neuroses he incurred in childhood are relevant to understanding both Hermann Broch’s way of thinking and his, according to his own standards failed, life.