- Jean Améry
Jean Améry (
October 31 ,1912 –October 17 1978 ), born Hans Mayer, was anAustria n-born essayist whose work was often informed by his experiences duringWorld War II . Formerly a philosophy and literature student in Vienna, Améry's participation in organized resistance against theNazi occupation ofBelgium resulted in his detainment and torture by theGestapo , and several years of imprisonment in concentration camps.Améry survived internments in
Auschwitz andBuchenwald , and was finally liberated at Bergen-Belsen in 1945. His most celebrated work, "At the Mind's Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities", suggests that torture was "the essence" of theThird Reich . Other notable works included "On Aging" and "On Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death".Early life
Jean Améry was born Hans Mayer in
Vienna ,Austria in 1912, to a Jewish father and a Catholic mother. His father was killed in action inWorld War I in 1916. Améry was raised as aRoman Catholic by his mother. [http://www-english.tamu.edu/pers/fac/myers/amery.html Amery: a biographical introduction ] ] Eventually, Améry and his mother returned to Vienna, where he enrolled in university to study literature and philosophy, but economic necessity kept him from regular pursuit of studies there.Religion
While Améry's family was "estranged from its Jewish origins, assimilated and intermarried", this alienation itself, in the context of Nazi occupation, informed much of his thought: "I wanted by all means to be an anti-Nazi, that most certainly, but of my own accord."
The
Nuremberg Laws of 1935, the text of which he soon came to know by heart, convinced Améry that Germany had essentially passed a sentence of death on all Jews. His "The Necessity and Impossibility of Being a Jew" speaks to this inner conflict as to his identity. He suggests that while his personal identity, the identity of his own childhood past, is distinctly Christian, he feels himself nonetheless a Jew in another sense, the sense of a Jewishness "without God, without history, without messianic-national hope". [Améry, Jean. "At the Mind's Limits". 1998, page 94]Later life
In 1938, when the Nazis were welcomed into Austria and the country joined with Germany into a "Greater Reich", Améry fled to France, and then to Belgium with his Jewish wife, whom he had chosen in opposition to his mother's wishes. Ironically, he was initially deported back to France by the Belgians as a German alien, and wound up interned in the south.
After escaping from the camp at Gurs and returning to Belgium, he joined the Resistance movement, at least in part, it seems, because it was more important for him to feel imperiled as a political than as a Jew. Involved in the distribution of anti-military propaganda to the German occupying forces, Améry was captured by the Nazis and routinely (and severely) tortured at the Belgian Gestapo center at
Fort Breendonk . When it was established that there was no information to be extracted from him, he was "demoted" from political prisoner to Jew, and shipped toAuschwitz .Lacking any trade skills, he was assigned to the harshest physical labors, building the I.G. Farben factory at Auschwitz III, the Buna-Monowitz labor camp. In the face of the Soviet invasion in the following year, he was evacuated first to
Buchenwald and then toBergen-Belsen , whence he was liberated by the British army in April 1945.Name change
After the war, the former Hans Mayer changed his name to Jean Améry (the surname being an
anagram in French of his family name) in order to symbolize his dissociation from German culture and his alliance with French culture. He refused to publish in Germany or Austria for many years, publishing only in Switzerland. He did not write at all of his experiences in the death camps until 1964, when, at the urging of German poet Helmut Heißenbüttel, he wrote his book "Jenseits von Schuld und Sühne" (literally, "Beyond Guilt and Atonement"). It was later translated into English by Sidney and Stella P. Rosenfeld as "At the Mind's Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and its Realities". Améry later wrote "On Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death"; perhaps it was his philosophical explorations in that book — along with fears of aging and broken health, and in the face of what must have been a morale-shattering, growing disillusionment with both French philosophy and German New Left politics — that led him to take his own life by overdose of sleeping pills in 1978.Literary and philosophical legacy
The publication of "At the Mind's Limits", Améry's stimulating and thought-provoking exploration of the Holocaust and the nature of the Third Reich, made him one of most highly regarded of Holocaust writers. In comparing the Nazis to a government of
sadism , Améry suggests that it is the sadist's nature to want "to nullify the world". For a Nazi torturer,[a] slight pressure by the tool-wielding hand is enough to turn the other – along with his head, in which are perhaps stored Kant and Hegel, and all nine symphonies, and "
The World as Will and Representation " – into a shrill squealing piglet at slaughter.Améry's efforts to preserve the memory of the Holocaust focused on the terror and horror of the events in a phenomenological and philosophical way, with what he characterized as "a scant inclination to be conciliatory". [Améry, Jean. "At the Mind's Limits". 1998, page 71] His explorations of his experiences and the meaning and legacy of Nazi-era suffering were aimed not at resolving the events finally into "the cold storage of history",Brudholm, Thomas and Murphy, Jeffrie G. "Resentment's Virtue". 2008, page 72] but rather keeping the subject alive so that it would not be lost to posterity, as an abstraction or mere text. As he wrote in his 1976 preface to "Beyond Guilt and Atonement":
I do not have [clarity] today, and I hope that I never will. Clarification would amount to disposal, settlement of the case, which can then be placed in the files of history. My book is meant to prevent precisely this. For nothing is resolved, nothing is settled, no remembering has become mere memory.
Like
Primo Levi andTadeusz Borowski , Améry survived internment at Auschwitz only to take his own life (although it is disputed whether or not Levi committed suicide).Notes
Further reading
*
W. G. Sebald , "Against the Irreversible" in "On the Natural History of Destruction", Penguin, 2003, pp. 147–72.External links
* [http://www-english.tamu.edu/pers/fac/myers/amery.html Jean Amery biography]
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=9490 Jean Améry's Gravesite]
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