![]() In writing Steppenwolf, Hesse used the stuff of personal experience to create a dense novel that promotes uninhibited psychological exploration and spiritual aspiration. The protagonist of the novel resembles Hesse in other ways, too, including his temperament and his tastes in music and literature. Like Haller, whose initials the author shares, Hesse felt depressed and tried to shake it off by sensual indulgence. ![]() The novel combines realistic and surrealistic techniques and is strongly autobiographical, since between 19, when he was writing the novel, Hesse went through a crisis similar to that faced by Haller. Through encounters with various people, including two prostitutes and a drug-dispensing saxophone player, he embarks on a search for psychic wholeness and spiritual understanding. Haller is a self-hating, fifty-year-old intellectual who despises the bourgeois culture in which he lives. The counterculture of that decade took inspiration from the fact that the protagonist of the novel, Harry Haller, makes use of sex and hallucinatory drugs as a means of fulfillment and self-discovery. ![]() It is one of the major novels by the renowned German writer and was extremely popular amongst young people in the United States in the 1960s. ![]() ![]() Hermann Hesse's novel Der Steppenwolf (English translation, Steppenwolf ), was first published in 1927. ![]()
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