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The Philosopher of Auschwitz Irene Heidelberger-Leonard

The Philosopher of Auschwitz By Irene Heidelberger-Leonard

The Philosopher of Auschwitz by Irene Heidelberger-Leonard


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Summary

Who was Jean Amery? Victim or survivor? Agnostic or Jew? Austrian or exile? Philosopher or journalist? This biography demonstrates that he is more - far more - than some enigmatic cult figure: he is one of the most influential of Holocaust survivors and one of the most provocative writers and thinkers of the 20th century.

The Philosopher of Auschwitz Summary

The Philosopher of Auschwitz: Jean Amery and Living with the Holocaust by Irene Heidelberger-Leonard

Who was Jean Amery? Victim or survivor? Agnostic or Jew? Austrian or exile? Philosopher or journalist? Jean Amery is not easy to classify but what this biography (the first in any language) demonstrates is that he is more - far more - than some enigmatic cult figure: he is one of the most influential of Holocaust survivors and one of the most provocative writers and thinkers of the 20th century. Jean Amery - born Hans Maier in Austria in 1912 - is perhaps best known for his seminal work, "At the Mind's Limits", one of the central texts on what Amery himself described as 'the subjective state of the victim.' But as Irene Heidelberger-Leonard's book reveals, Amery was not just a 'professional concentration camper', as he sometimes dubbed himself in a mixture of mockery and resignation. Drawing on a wide range of previously unpublished documents, Heidelberger-Leonard illuminates the turbulent life of this complex figure, from his middle class origins in pre-war Austria; his flight from his homeland to join the Resistance; his imprisonment in Auschwitz and Belsen; to his eventual suicide in 1978. This definitive biography examines how Amery grappled with what it meant to be both a victim and survivor of the concentration camps and what his experiences there reveal about the tension between human dignity and the reality of horror. Focusing chiefly on Amery's literary works, one of the book's great strengths lies in exploring how every aspect of Amery's life and thought is inextricably connected with his writings. This biography brilliantly demonstrates the importance of Amery in his own time and shows how his relevance extends far beyond.

The Philosopher of Auschwitz Reviews

'[Jean Amery was] one of the few authentic voices on the Holocaust...based on the most "ponderous insights into the irreparable condition of the victims, and that it is from such insights alone that the true nature of the terror visited on them can be extrapolated with some precision."' - W. G. Sebald; 'one reads [At the Mind's Limits] with almost physical pain...all the way to its stoic conclusion' - Primo Levi; '[Jean Amery's] experience of torture at the hands of the Gestapo remains the locus classicus on the subject. Speaking out on behalf of the hitherto silent victims, Amery was one of the first - along with his fellow Auschwitz inmate Primo Levi - to universalize his ordeal. Irene Heidelberger-Leonard has evoked an unnecessary martyr whose death was as ignoble as his life was noble. The collective recollection of the Holocaust, more in anger than in sorrow, is Amery's legacy to a world in which he saw himself as a superfluous man. As this biography demonstrates, his witness has never been more necessary than today.' - Daniel Johnson, TLS; 'Jean Amery offers a perceptive view of Amery's life and work and is like all of Prof. Heidelberger's other books very well written and accessible also to the interested 'lay' public. I think it would be a very valuable book to be made available to an English readership.' - Andrea Reiter, Senior Lecturer in Modern Languages and Parkes Fellow in the Department of History at the University of Southampton; 'The Holocaust has its own saints, just like any other subculture. Jean Amery is one of them. There are biographies which transcend the boundaries of their genre, and can be read like novels. This is true of Irene Heidelberger-Leonard's work on Jean Amery which at the same time succeeds in conveying a monumental view of the historical era which he lived through.' - Imre Kertesz

About Irene Heidelberger-Leonard

Irene Heidelberger-Leonard is Professor of German Literature at the Free University of Brussels. She has written extensively on the German post-war period and its relationship to National Socialism and is the editor of a nine-volume edition of Amery's writings. Her biography of Jean Amery was named as non-fiction Book of the Year by the German Cultural Foundation in 2004 and was awarded the prestigious biennial Einhard Prize for Outstanding European Biography 2005.

Table of Contents

1. VILLAGE IDYLL (1912-1924) - Bad Ischl and the Magic of the Forest Hohenems: certificate of citizenship and ostensible homeland . The family . Early years in Vienna . Hans and Ernst Mayer: friends in life and death . Bad Ischl . Who or what is a Jew? . A divided heart . Winter world versus summer world . The tribulations of the young grammar-school boy 2. ZIRKUSGASSE 48 (1924-1935) - The Enticements of Reason Leopold Langhammer, Mayers mentor . Red Vienna . First encounters: Broch, Canetti, and the Austrian literary scene . Hans Mayers personal revolution . Approaches to the Wiener Kreis [Vienna Circle] . The future writer . Die Brucke 3. HANS MAYER AS A WRITER OF FICTION - Die Schiffbruchigen [The Shipwrecked], 1935/45 1935 Preludes . The first novel . Autobiography as historical writing . Althager - an alter ego? . The relationship to the other . Genophobia . Art should not describe life, but create life . 1945: To be or not to be . Auschwitz - a mass fate? . The Auschwitz discourse then and now 4. YEARS OF WANDERING (1938-1945) - The Mind Knows no Limits Vienna before and after the Anschluss . Antwerp (1939-1940) . St. Cyprien - Gurs (1940-1941) . Flight to occupied Belgium . Resistance in Brussels . Breendonck (1943) . Torture in his novel (1945) . Torture in the essay (12965) . Auschwitz - Dora-Mittelbau - Bergen Belsen (1944-1945) . Jean Amery / Primo Levi - an excursus . Friends strange to each other . Coming home to no home 5. LIVING ON - BUT HOW AND WHERE? (1945-1955) - The principle of education The original theme of suicide: Loves Crown of Thorns: variation 1 . Heinrich Greyt: variation 2 . Die Selbstmorder: variation 3 . Kleist: variation 4 . Die Eingemauerten [The Immured]: variation 5 . Existentialism in France. Revolution of the mind? Fashion? Or the twilight of the esprit francais? . On the Psychology of the German People: revenge? . Neither guilt nor atonement . Deranged criminals . Work will not make you free . Letter of farewell to Knut Hamsun . Where now? His fixed point: Maria Leitner . Vienna? Bad Ischl? The indissoluble boyhood friendship . Cologne? Comrade Heinz Kuhn . Dangerous games with identity . Lores London? Sartres Paris? . Zurich and the Dukas press agency? . Brussels old and new . The Adelboden sanatorium . Journalistic confectionery 6. JEAN AMERY THE JOURNALIST (1955-1965) - All Active on the Western Front Portraits of famous contemporaries . Vive la science! . Jazz - heightened emotion . Stars of the fifties . Revelations . Gerhart Hauptmann, especially the negative aspects . Preface to the Future . Inventory . Alternative memory . The engine of a culture? . Frances cultural mission to the world . Jean-Paul Sartre - First excursus . Sartre - writer of the Resistance . Sartre - the teacher of life . Sartre - the teacher of thinking . The first idea for Charles Bovary . Sartre - the mouthpiece of the wartime generation . Le faux, cest la mort . The God that failed . Americas political sense of mission . In the name of the Cold War . The abolition of death, the glorification of sex . Americas cultural contribution: sociology . England between Europe and America? . Englands not so splendid isolation . Germany - an upswing through anaesthetization . First visit: Hitler never existed . Germany 1945, Germany 1952 . A cultural miracle? . No revocation of history . German thinkers after 1945 . German writers after 1945 . A break with emigration . No pact between reader and author . Hope and the second generation 7. DRAMA OF THE MIND IN THREE ACTS - the autobiographical trilogy Prologue . Heissenbuttel and the consequences . Who brings whom to the meeting?. If not now, when? . The Auschwitz trial . A star is born . Act I: At the Minds Limits (1966): Auschwitz and the Intellectual . The single useful starting point: the I . Less than welcome approval . At the bodys limits . Welcome approval . Merkur to the end . Adorno - friend or f

Additional information

GOR007362785
9781848851504
1848851502
The Philosopher of Auschwitz: Jean Amery and Living with the Holocaust by Irene Heidelberger-Leonard
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
2010-07-30
316
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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