Lou Andreas-Salomé (born eitherLouise von Salomé orLuíza Gustavovna Salomé orLioulia von Salomé, Russian:Луиза Густавовна Саломе; 12 February 1861 – 5 February 1937) was a Russian-born psychoanalyst and a well-traveled author, narrator, and essayist from a FrenchHuguenot-German family.[1] Her diverse intellectual interests led to friendships with a broad array of distinguished thinkers, includingFriedrich Nietzsche,Sigmund Freud,Paul Rée, andRainer Maria Rilke.[2]
Lou Salomé was born inSt. Petersburg to Gustav Ludwig von Salomé (1807–1878), and Louise von Salomé (née Wilm) (1823–1913). Lou was their only daughter; they had five sons. Although she would later be attacked by theNazis as a "Finnish Jew",[3] her parents were actually of FrenchHuguenot and Northern German descent.[4] The youngest of six children, she grew up in a wealthy and well-cultured household, with all children learning Russian, German, and French; Salomé was allowed to attend her brothers' classes.[citation needed]
Born into a strictly Protestant family, Salomé grew to resent the Reformed church and Hermann Dalton, the Orthodox Protestant pastor.[citation needed] She refused to be confirmed by Dalton, officially left the church at age 16, but remained interested in intellectual pursuits in the areas of philosophy, literature and religion.[citation needed]
In fact, she was fascinated by the sermons of the Dutch pastor Hendrik Gillot, known in St. Petersburg as an opponent of Dalton's. Gillot, 25 years her senior, took her on as a student, engaging with her in the fields of theology, philosophy, world religions, and French andGerman literature.[citation needed] Together they studied innumerable authors, philosophers, theological and religious subjects, and all of this wide-ranging study laid the groundwork for her intellectual encounters with very well-known thinkers of her time.[according to whom?]
According to Salomé inRuth, written after Gillot's death, he became so smitten with her that he wanted to divorce his wife and marry her. Her account is doubted by her biographer Rudolph Binion,[5] but in any case, Salomé claims she turned him down.[according to whom?]
Following her father's death in 1879, Salomé and her mother went toZürich so that Salomé could acquire a university education as a "guest student."[citation needed] In her one year at theUniversity of Zurich—one of the few schools that accepted female students—Salomé attended lectures in philosophy (logic, history of philosophy, ancient philosophy, and psychology) and theology (dogmatics).[citation needed] During this time, Salomé's physical health was failing due to lung disease, causing her to cough up blood.[citation needed] Due to this, she was instructed to heal in warmer climates, so in February 1882, Salomé and her mother went to Rome.[citation needed]
Salomé's mother took her to Rome when Salomé was 21. At a literary salon in the city, Salomé became acquainted with the authorPaul Rée. Rée proposed to her, but she instead suggested that they live and study together as 'brother and sister' along with another man for company, and thereby establish an academic commune.[6] Rée accepted the idea, and suggested that they be joined by his friendFriedrich Nietzsche.
The two met Nietzsche in Rome in April 1882. Nietzsche is believed to have instantly fallen in love with Salomé, as Rée had earlier done. Nietzsche asked Rée to propose marriage to Salomé on his behalf, which she rejected, although interested in Nietzsche as a friend.[6] Nietzsche nonetheless was content to join Rée and Salomé touring through Switzerland and Italy together, planning their commune. On 13 May, in Lucerne, when Nietzsche was alone with Salomé, he earnestly proposed marriage to her again, and she again rejected him. He was happy to continue with the plans for an academic commune.[6]
After discovering the situation, Nietzsche's sisterElisabeth Förster-Nietzsche became determined to separate him from Salomé whom she described as an "immoral woman".[7]
Nonetheless, Nietzsche, Rée, and Salomé travelled with Salomé's mother through Italy and considered where they would set up their "Winterplan" commune. This commune was intended to be set up in an abandoned monastery. Having found no suitable location, the plan was abandoned.[citation needed]
After arriving inLeipzig in October 1882, the three spent a number of weeks together. However, the following month Rée and Salomé parted company with Nietzsche, leaving for Stibbe without any plans to meet again. Nietzsche soon fell into a period of mental anguish, although he continued to write to Rée, asking him, "We shall see one another from time to time, won't we?"[8] In later recriminations, Nietzsche would blame the failure in his attempts to woo Salomé both on Salomé, Rée, and on the intrigues of his sister (who had written letters to the families of Salomé and Rée to disrupt their plans for the commune). Nietzsche wrote of the affair in 1883 that he felt "genuine hatred for [his] sister."[8]
Salomé would later (1894) write a study,Friedrich Nietzsche in seinen Werken (Friedrich Nietzsche in his Works), of Nietzsche's personality and philosophy.[9]
In 1884 Salomé became acquainted withHelene von Druskowitz, the second woman to receive a philosophy doctorate in Zurich.[citation needed] It was also rumoured that Salomé later had a romantic relationship with Sigmund Freud.[10]
Lou Andreas-Salomé and Friedrich Carl Andreas, 1886
Salomé and Rée moved toBerlin and lived together until a few years before her celibate marriage[11] to linguistics scholarFriedrich Carl Andreas. Salomé's co-habitation with Andreas caused the despairing Rée to fade from Salomé's life despite her assurances. Despite her opposition to marriage and her open relationships with other men, Salomé and Andreas remained married from 1887 until his death in 1930.
Throughout her married life, von Salomé was engaged in affairs, and many in-depth correspondences. Accounts of many of her relationships are given in her volumeLebensrückblick.
Her lovers and/or correspondents included the German journalist and politicianGeorg Ledebour; the Austrian poetRainer Maria Rilke, about whom she wrote an analytical memoir;[12] and the psychiatristSigmund Freud.
Her affair with the Viennese physician Friedrich Pineles ended in an abortion and a tragic renunciation of motherhood.[13]
In May 1897, in Munich, she metRilke, who had been introduced to her by Jacob Wassermann.[15] She was 36 while Rilke was only 20. She had already published with some successIm Kampf um Gott "where she exposed the problem of loss of faith (which had been her own for a long time)", several articles, and the studyJesus der Jude that Rilke had read.[15]
AsPhilippe Jaccottet reports, Salomé wrote inLebensrückblick: "I was your wife for years because you were the first reality, where man and body are indistinguishable from each other, an indisputable fact of life itself. I could have said literally what you told me when you confessed your love to me: Only you are real. That is how we became husband and wife even before we became friends, not by choice, but by this unfathomable marriage [...] We were brother and sister, but as in a distant past, before the marriage between brother and sister became sacrilegious."[16]
In 1899 with her husband Friedrich-Carl, then again in 1900, Lou travelled to Russia, the second time with Rilke, whose first name she changed from René to Rainer.[17] She taught him Russian, to readTolstoy (whom he would later meet) andPushkin. She introduced him to patrons and other people in the arts, remaining Rilke's advisor, confidante, and muse throughout his adult life.[11] The romance between the poet and Salomé lasted three years, then turned into a friendship, which would continue until Rilke's death, as evidenced by their correspondence. In 1937,Freud said of Salomé's relationship with Rilke: "She was both the muse and the attentive mother of the great poet."[18]
Von Salomé met Freud in September 1911, on the occasion of the 3rd Congress of Psychoanalysis held inWeimar[19]). Despite gossip about their romantic involvement, her relationship with Freud was intellectual. In one letter Freud commends Salomé's deep understanding of people so much that he believed she understood people better than they understood themselves.[20]
Von Salomé also knew Freud's daughter,Anna Freud. They met in Vienna and corresponded for years, as did Sigmund Freud and von Salomé.[21] According toAnna Freud, von Salomé's work,Friedrich Nietzsche in seinen Werken (Friedrich Nietzsche in his works) effectively was psychoanalysis.[22] It was the first book about the German philosopher.[23]
By 1930, Salomé was increasingly weak, suffered from a heart condition and diabetes, and had to be treated several times in the hospital. Her husband visited her daily during a six-week stay after a foot operation, which was arduous for the old, rather ill man, and this made them grow very close after a forty-year marriage marked by hurtful behaviour on both sides and long periods of non-communication.[24] Freud appreciated this from afar, writing: "Only what is genuinely true proves itself so long-lasting." ("So dauerhaft beweist sich doch nur das Echte.") Friedrich Carl Andreas died of cancer in 1930, and Salomé herself underwent a difficult cancer operation in 1935. At the age of 74, she ceased to work as a psychoanalyst.
Salomé died ofuremia inGöttingen on 5 February 1937. Her urn was laid to rest in her husband's grave in the cemetery on the Groner Landstraße in Göttingen. She is commemorated in the city by a memorial plaque outside the property where her house stood, a street named after her (Lou-Andreas-Salomé-Weg), and the name of the Lou Andreas-Salomé Institut für Psychoanalyse und Psychotherapie. A few days before her death, the Gestapo confiscated her library (according to other sources it was anSA group who destroyed the library shortly after her death). The reasons given for this confiscation were that she had been a colleague of Sigmund Freud, had practised "a Jewish science", and owned many books by Jewish authors.[25]
Title page of the 1927 edition of 'Das Haus', published by the German Book Community, a national book club.
Salomé was a prolific writer who wrote fiction, criticism and essays on religion, philosophy, sexuality and psychology.[26] A uniform edition of her works is being published in Germany by MedienEdition Welsch.[27] She authored a "Hymn to Life" that so deeply impressed Nietzsche that he was moved to set it to music. Salomé's literary and analytical studies became such a vogue inGöttingen, where she lived late in her life, that theGestapo waited until shortly after her death to "clean" her library of works by Jews.
She was one of the first female psychoanalysts and one of the first women to write psychoanalytically on female sexuality,[28] beforeHelene Deutsch, for instance in her essay on the anal-erotic (1916),[29] an essay admired by Freud.[30] However, she had written about the psychology of female sexuality before she ever met Freud, in her bookDie Erotik (1911).
She wrote more than a dozen novels and novellas, includingIm Kampf um Gott,Ruth,Rodinka,Ma,Fenitschka – eine Ausschweifung, as well as non-fiction studies such asHenrik Ibsens Frauengestalten (1892), a study ofIbsen's female characters, and a book on Nietzsche,Friedrich Nietzsche in seinen Werken (1894). The first English translation of her novelDas Haus (1921) appeared in 2021 under the titleAnneliese's House, in an annotated edition by Frank Beck and Raleigh Whitinger.[31]
Salomé edited a memoir about Rilke after his death in 1926. Among her works is also herLebensrückblick, which she wrote during her last years based on memories of her life as a free woman. In her memoirs, first published in their original German in 1951, she goes into depth about her faith and her relationships.
Whoever reaches into a rosebush may seize a handful of flowers; but no matter how many one holds, it's only a small portion of the whole. Nevertheless, a handful is enough to experience the nature of the flowers. Only if we refuse to reach into the bush, because we can't possibly seize all the flowers at once, or if we spread out our handful of roses as if it were the whole of the bush itself—only then does it bloom apart from us, unknown to us, and we are left alone.[32]
Salomé is said to have remarked in her last days, "I have really done nothing but work all my life, work ... why?" And in her last hours, as if talking to herself, she is reported to have said, "If I let my thoughts roam I find no one. The best, after all, is death."[33]
Mexican playwrightSabina Berman includes Lou Andreas-Salomé as a character in her 2000 playFeliz nuevo siglo, Doktor Freud (Freud Skating).[37]
Salomé is also fictionalized in Angela von der Lippe'sThe Truth about Lou,[38] inBrenda Webster'sVienna Triangle,[39] in Clare Morgan'sA Book for All and None,[40] inRobert Langs' two-act playFreud's Bird of Prey,[41] and in Araceli Bruch's five-act playRe-Call (written in Catalan).[42]
Lou Salome, an opera in two acts byGiuseppe Sinopoli with libretto from Karl Dietrich Gräwe, premiered in 1981 at the Bavarian State Opera, withAugust Everding as General Director, staging byGötz Friedrich and set design by Andreas Reinhardt.[43]
The Locked Body of Lou (Заклученото тело на Лу) is a postmodern novel by Macedonian authorOlivera Kjorveziroska, published in 2005. The novel explores the character of Lou Andreas-Salomé from a biofictional perspective.[45]
Lou Andreas-Salome is the namesake of the indie rock band Lou Salome.[46]
^Binion, Rudolph (1968).Frau Lou: Nietzsche's Wayward Disciple. Princeton University Press. p. 504.ISBN978-0691618609.No evidence beyond Lou's say-so will ever turn up that Gillot or Nietzsche proposed to her. And no say-so of hers in either case will ever turn up antedating 'Ruth' and 'Im Kampf um Gott' respectively—or for that matter antedating either putative suitor's death.
^abcNietzsche: The Man and his Philosophy, by R.J. Hollingdale (Cambridge University Press 1999), page 149
^Nietzsche: The Man and his Philosophy, by R.J. Hollingdale (Cambridge University Press 1999), page 151
^abNietzsche: The Man and his Philosophy, by R.J. Hollingdale (Cambridge University Press 1999), page 152
^Elisabeth Roudinesco et Michel Plon, Dictionnaire de la psychanalyse, Paris, Fayard, coll. « La Pochothèque », 2011 (1re éd. 1997), 1789 p. (ISBN 978-2-253-08854-7), « Andreas-Salomé Lou, née Liola (Louise) von Salomé (1861-1937). Femme de lettres et psychanalyste allemande », p. 63-68.
^Elisabeth Roudinesco et Michel Plon, Dictionnaire de la psychanalyse, Paris, Fayard, coll. « La Pochothèque », 2011 (1re éd. 1997), 1789 p. (ISBN 978-2-253-08854-7), « Andreas-Salomé Lou, née Liola (Louise) von Salomé (1861-1937). Femme de lettres et psychanalyste allemande », p. 63-68.
^abPhilippe Jaccottet,Rilke par lui-même, 1970, p.29
^Philippe Jaccottet,Rilke par lui-même, 1970, p.29–30
^Victor Mazin (Spring 2002)."The Femme Fatale – Lou Andreas-Salomé".European Journal of Psychoanalysis (14).Archived from the original on 10 February 2024.By 1895, when Studies on Hysteria (Freud 1895) was published, Salomé was most probably already familiar with some of Freud's ideas. Some suppose that they may have met for the first time in Vienna as early as the spring of 1895, but that they met in September 1911 at the 3rd Congress of Psychoanalysis in Weimar is absolutely certain. Roughly a year later, on 25 October 1912, Lou Andreas-Salomé arrived in Vienna to study psychoanalysis (1). For half a year she attended Freud's Saturday Lectures at a clinic, and meetings at his home on Wednesdays. In spite of the fact that they met as contemporaries (Salomé was five years younger than Freud) and as people with an affinity of spirit, their views were so different that it could be said that it was a meeting between the optimist of the 19th century and the pessimist of the 20th century. Their friendship lasted over 25 years.
^Freud, Sigmund. Richards, Angela, editor.Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality and Other Works. The Penguin Freud Library, Vol. 7 Penguin. (1977)ISBN9780140137972 pp.295-302
Livingstone, Angela: (1984).Lou Andreas Salomé: Her Life and Work. London: Gordon Fraser, 1984;ISBN0918825040
Michaud, Stéphane:Lou Andreas-Salomé. L'alliée de la vie. Seuil, Paris 2000;ISBN2-02-023087-9
Pechota Vuilleumier, Cornelia: 'O Vater, laß uns ziehn!' Literarische Vater-Töchter um 1900. Gabriele Reuter, Hedwig Dohm, Lou Andreas- Salomé. Olms, Hildesheim 2005;ISBN3-487-12873-X
Pechota Vuilleumier, Cornelia:Heim und Unheimlichkeit bei Rainer Maria Rilke und Lou Andreas-Salomé. Literarische Wechselwirkungen. Olms, Hildesheim 2010;ISBN978-3-487-14252-4
Peters, H. F.,My Sister, My Spouse: A Biography of Lou Andreas-Salome, New York: Norton, 1962
Salomé, Lou:Friedrich Nietzsche in seinen Werken, 1894; Eng.,Nietzsche, tr. and ed. Siegfried Mandel,Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois PressUniv. of Illinois Press, 2001
Stieg, Gerald: « Rilke (Rainer Maria) », inDictionnaire du monde germanique , Dir: É. Décultot, M. Espagne et J. Le Rider, Paris, Bayard, 2007,p. 979–980(ISBN9782227476523)