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W. J. Stein: A Biography

$ 34.00 USD

Based on personal knowledge and intimate interviews with his subject, as well as access to W. J. Stein’s archive of letters and documents, Johannes Tautz’s biography is thoroughly researched and a lovingly detailed study of an exceptional life.

Walter Johannes Stein (1891-1957) was one of the original pioneers of Anthroposophy. A student of Rudolf Steiner, he met his spiritual teacher while studying at Vienna University. After serving in World War I, Stein was invited by Steiner to teach history and literature at the fledgling Waldorf school in Stuttgart, despite the fact that Stein’s doctorate was in philosophy and his training in mathematics and physics. Through his efforts to master the new disciplines, and with the aid of unconventional methods of research, Stein developed groundbreaking new insights into the story of Parzival and the mystery of the Holy Grail, which led to his seminal book The Ninth Century and the Holy Grail.

Tautz describes Stein’s close friendship with Eugen Kolisko, his struggles to help establish the threefold social order, his work as a Goetheanum lecturer, and his eventual estrangement from the Anthroposophical Society following Rudolf Steiner’s death. After journeys of discovery across Europe, Stein landed in London in 1933—a refugee from Nazi aggression in Central Europe—where he met his mentor D .N. Dunlop, who employed him to help establish the first World Power Conference. Based in England for the finla 24 years of his life, Stein became a prolific and popular lecturer and the editor of the important anthroposophic journal The Present Age.

Long out-of-print, the new edition of this important work is a welcome addition to the growing number of biographies on the pioneers of early Anthroposophy. 

 

Written by Johannes Tautz

Translated by John M. Wood and Marguerite A. Wood

298 pages

5.5" x 8.5"

 

Paperback