Glossary entry

German term or phrase:

Salonlöwe

English translation:

lion of the salons

Added to glossary by David Williams
Jan 23, 2009 08:22
15 yrs ago
German term

Salonlöwe

German to English Social Sciences History Social history
"der vermögender Bankierssohn und Salonlöwen des wilhelminischen Deutschland"
Referring to Harry Graf Kessler, who was certainly active in Berlin's salon society in the 1890s. I'm thinking along the lines of "the wealthy banker’s son from the salon society of Wilhelmine Germany".
Change log

Jan 23, 2009 12:03: Steffen Walter changed "Term asked" from "Salonlöwen " to "Salonlöwe"

Proposed translations

+7
2 hrs
German term (edited): Salonlöwen
Selected

lion of the salons

This expression is often used and totally appropriate for Kessler. Just in case there is any doubt, these are literary or cultural salons, not just drawing rooms. Apologies if I am teaching Grandma to suck eggs.

http://books.google.com/books?id=F0N59g93EBYC&pg=PA106&lpg=P...

Humboldt had long regarded the French capital as his true home. There he found, not only scientific sympathy, but the social stimulus which his vigorous and healthy mind eagerly craved. He was equally in his element as the lion of the salons and as the savant of the institute and the observatory.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_von_Humboldt

http://books.google.com/books?id=4Bi6H6TG6_oC&pg=PA161&lpg=P...

http://books.google.com/books?id=-eMhMvFYb0sC&pg=PA19&lpg=PA...


--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 7 days (2009-01-30 09:24:01 GMT) Post-grading
--------------------------------------------------

Thanks, again, for the points.
Peer comment(s):

agree Ingeborg Gowans (X) : well you taught "this grandma", thanks
30 mins
Mine is 97 and as sharp as a pin - I can't teach her anything except perhaps how to turn her mobile phone on!! Thanks, Ingeborg.
agree Ann C Sherwin : "salon lion" also gets quite a few hits if you filter out hair and beauty salons.
1 hr
Thanks, Ann
agree Inge Meinzer : great research! :-)
2 hrs
Thanks - he crops up in my own research, so I'm a bit of a cheat really!
agree Lancashireman : Yet another example of why it is best to wait and see what comes in a couple of hours later, i.e. before merrily clicking away on 'agree'.
3 hrs
Thanks, Andrew
agree franglish
3 hrs
Thank you, franglish
agree Rebecca Garber : This fits the time period better than society lion, which I do really like for moderns.
4 hrs
Thanks, Rebecca
agree Dr.G.MD (X)
13 hrs
Thanks, Dr G
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Thank you!!!"
+4
5 mins
German term (edited): Salonlöwen

Lounge lizard

Peer comment(s):

agree Charles Rothwell (X) : I agree. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/lounge lizard
2 mins
agree Textklick
7 mins
agree Sven Petersson
18 mins
agree Jutta Schandel
29 mins
disagree Helen Shiner : I disagree on the basis of Kessler's biography - he was a very productive writer, Kulturkritiker and supporter of many aspects of the arts and many artists, initiator of projects. He had no time for lazy lounge lizardry.
1 hr
I would suggest 'socialite' as a more apposite term in that case.
agree Harald Moelzer (medical-translator)
2 days 21 hrs
Something went wrong...
+4
6 mins
German term (edited): Salonlöwen

society lion

Peer comment(s):

agree Angela Parker : "Lounge lizard" sounds a bit too negative to me
2 hrs
Danke, Angela!
agree Helen Shiner : I think this is another good solution to the problem in Kessler's case.
2 hrs
Danke, Helen!
agree franglish
6 hrs
Danke!
agree Harald Moelzer (medical-translator)
2 days 21 hrs
Something went wrong...
+3
5 mins
German term (edited): Salonlöwen

socialite, society man

Meint Pons Collins Großwörterbuch.

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 28 mins (2009-01-23 08:51:21 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

I don't know about the "salon aspect" that depends on the context. If they are important I could imagine that the "salons" are mentioned at some other point in the text? What precisely do you want to say about Graf Kessler?

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 hr (2009-01-23 10:09:29 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

Hm - I find this a bit amazing - I would have thought that you can be a socialite and a pacifist at the same time. Or does the text want to stress that he was somewhat lazy and superficial in his youth and then became more serious and involved?
Note from asker:
Yes, I was contemplating socialite, but wouldn't it be necessary to specify the salon aspect? Maybe not.
The text says that he changed from this, in his early years, becoming a convinced republican and pacifist in later life.
Indeed, but I guess it is the apparent contrast between his "prewar aestheticism and his postwar politics" (see ref. below) that this is getting at.
Peer comment(s):

agree Nicole Schnell
3 mins
Danke schön, Nicole.
agree Paul Skidmore : For an academic / semi-academic publication I would use "socialite"
40 mins
Thank you, Paul. As usual, context is important.
agree Tanja K
1 hr
Danke schön, Tanja.
neutral Helen Shiner : I don't think this is strong enough - the lion bit is missing./'Lion of the salons' is often used, as is the verb to lionise which is related. These were people who were at the centre of cultural happenings, nothing to do with pussy cats.
2 hrs
I think "Salonlöwen" were more the pussy cat version - not the real thing. ;-)
Something went wrong...
17 mins
German term (edited): Salonlöwen

salon playboy

yet another

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2 hrs (2009-01-23 10:28:46 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

less perjorative= mainstay of Berlin's salon crowd/scene/landscape
Note from asker:
That may be going a BIT too far.
Something went wrong...

Reference comments

1 hr
Reference:

Kessler

"Count Harry Kessler, German diplomat, aesthete, patron of the arts, publisher, biographer, diarist, librettist, collector of art and books, army officer, and museum director, was, in W.H. Auden's opinion, 'probably the most cosmopolitan man who ever lived.' His life seems to have been written by Thomas Mann, whose fate in many ways ran parallel. Easton's THE RED COUNT can be enjoyed as both cultural history and ironic tragedy."—Harper's magazine
http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9472.php

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 1 hr (2009-01-23 09:56:35 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

The life of Count Harry Kessler (1868-1937), the famous Anglo-German art patron, writer, and activist, offers a vivid and engrossing perspective on the tumultuous transformation of art and politics that took place in modern Europe between 1890 and 1930. In the first half of his career Kessler was one of the most ardent and well-known champions of aesthetic modernism in Imperial Germany, becoming a friend and patron to pioneering artists and writers of his day, most notably French sculptor Aristide Maillol, Belgian architect Henry van de Velde, English theater designer Gordon Craig, and Austrian poet and playwright Hugo von Hofmannsthal and, in his capacity as director of the Museum of Arts and Crafts in Weimar and vice-president of the German Artists League, served as a spokesman and lightning rod for embattled modern art. In the aftermath of the First World War, in which he served as a soldier, propagandist, and secret agent, Kessler embarked on a public career as a committed internationalist and pacifist, a stance that led ultimately to his exile from Germany upon the Nazi seizure of power. Making use of the recently discovered portions of Kessler's extensive diaries, one of the most remarkable journals ever written, Laird Easton explains the reasons for this startling metamorphosis, showing for the first time the continuities between Kessler's prewar aestheticism and his postwar politics and highlighting his importance within the larger history of the rise of modern art and politics. This lively narrative, the first English-language biography of Harry Kessler, provides a rich and fascinating portrait of the man whom W. H. Auden called "a crown witness of our times."
http://books.google.com/books?id=MvJRMR6zyTYC&dq=Kessler sal...
Peer comments on this reference comment:

agree Ingeborg Gowans (X) : good and extensive research which supports your answer
1 hr
Thanks, Ingeborg - he was a fascinating and admirable man in many respects.
Something went wrong...
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search