Enzensberger was born in 1929 in
Kaufbeuren, a small town in
Bavaria, as the eldest of four boys. His father, Andreas Enzensberger, worked as a telecommunications technician, and his mother, Leonore (Ledermann) Enzensberger, a kindergarten teacher. Enzensberger was part of the last generation of intellectuals whose writing was shaped by first-hand experience of Nazi Germany. The Enzensberger family moved to
Nuremberg in 1931. Enzensberger studied literature and philosophy at the universities of
Erlangen,
Freiburg, and
Hamburg, and at the
Sorbonne in Paris, receiving his doctorate in 1955 for a thesis about
Clemens Brentano's poetry. Until 1957 he worked as a radio editor in
Stuttgart with
Alfred Andersch; He became one of the leading authors in the
Group 47, an institution that shaped the culture of Germany after World War II. In 1957 Group 47 member
Ingeborg Bachmann and Enzensberger began to exchange letters. His first literary publication was the poem collection
verteidigung der wölfe (Defense of the Wolves) in 1957, followed by
landessprache in 1960, both originally in all-lowercase. They were perceived as opposition to the establishment of those who had been on battle fields and in camps, described as "furious, elegant and of controlled rage" ("furios, elegant und von kontrollierter Wut"). In 1960, he was the editor of
Museum der modernen Poesie (Museum of modern poetry), an anthology of poems by contemporary authors in a juxtaposition of original and translation, which was rare at the time. From 1960 to 1961, Enzensberger was a
literary editor () at
Suhrkamp in Frankfurt. He spoke several languages, intensified by travels: English, French, Italian, Spanish, Norwegian, Swedish and some Russian. and Cuba. He had the composer
Hans Werner Henze invited to Cuba in 1969, and wrote the libretto for his
El Cimarrón for baritone and three instrumentalists based on the memories of the escaped slave
Esteban Montejo. From 1965, Enzensberger edited the magazine ''''; his writings influenced the 1968
West German student movement. He promoted the writers
Ryszard Kapuscinski,
Raoul Schrott,
Irene Dische,
Christoph Ransmayr, and
W.G. Sebald, among others. The literary journal survived for only two years. ==Personal life==