Hubert Fichte was born on 21 March 1935 in Perleberg Hospital. A few weeks after his birth his family moved to Hamburg-Lokstedt. Fichte's mother worked as stenographer and he was mostly raised by his grandmother. His father, a
Jewish merchant, emigrated to Sweden and Fichte never met him. His parents were not married. As a child Fichte was made to believe he was a half-orphan. He received an education as an actor and as a farmer. In the late fifties he worked in
Montjustin, not far from
Forcalquier in Provence, as a
shepherd for several months at painter
Serge Fiorio. From 1961 on he lived in
Hamburg. In the mid-1960s, Fichte published his first novels. He then had a regular column called
Plattenragout (record ragout) in the magazine
konkret. In 1966 he criticised the German police's work in those days in an article called "the police – your friend and aide": "Shall the baton displace arguments, humour, understanding from the side of the police in this young democracy, burdened with an evil mortgage?" (
konkret, Nr. 8). His main influences were
Marcel Proust,
Hans Henny Jahnn and
Jean Genet. With Genet he did a famous interview. He first met Jahnn in 1949 and Jahnn helped Fichte reveal his homosexuality. Fichte described their friendship in his novel
Versuch über die Pubertät (Attempt about the puberty) in 1974. In the 1970s, Fichte devoted himself increasingly to
ethnological research. From 1971 to 1975 he travelled to
Bahia (Brazil),
Haiti and
Trinidad several times. He later described the works based on this travels, like
Xango (1976) and
Petersilie, (1980) as "Ethnopoesie". With them he created his very own technique of combining science and poetry. A sort of "domestic ethnology" was done with his
St. Pauli interviews like in
Wolli Indienfahrer (St. Pauli is a famous low income and subculture district in Hamburg). Fichte's cohabitee (since 1961)
Leonore Mau published her photograph volumes
Xango and
Petersilie at the same time. In the late sixties, Fichte began writing his main work
Die Geschichte der Empfindlichkeit (the history of the sensibility, or: the story of the pettishness) a monumental cycle of novels. His last set of plans showed his intention to write nineteen books, most of them novels, but also some volumes of essays, called “Glossen”. For these “Glossen” he wanted to compile and rewrite much of his journalistic work like radio features, news paper articles and interviews. The novels describe the life of the homosexual writer “Jäcki” and his cohabitee “Irma”, an older woman and photographer. Fichte could not finish the whole cycle. The existing parts were published after his death. They contain 6 complete novels, 2 fragments of novels, 4 “Glossen”-volumes and 5 supplement volumes. The latter contain interviews, articles and features he wanted to use for “Glossen” books, but could not revise them. At least three more novels he had planned are completely missing. Fichte died of AIDS-related illness in 1986. He is buried in the
Nienstedten Cemetery. Since 1995 the city of Hamburg has awarded the Hubert Fichte Prize for extraordinary literary works. == Awards ==