Jean Améry

1912–1978

Born into a middle-class family in Vienna as Hans Mayer (the letters of his last name were later rearranged into Améry), Jean Améry published political and literary essays. In 1939, he escaped to Belgium and joined the Resistance. Arrested by the Gestapo for his anti-Nazi activities, Améry was tortured and then, after his Jewish lineage was discovered, interned at several concentration camps. Although he wrote comparatively little on his life during the Holocaust, his best-known work focuses on his experiences as a survivor. His deeply meditative essays and novels have been compared to the works of Primo Levi. Améry committed suicide in 1978.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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On the Necessity and Impossibility of Being a Jew

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Not seldom, when in conversation my partner draws me into a plural—that is, as soon as he includes my person in whatever connection and says to me: “We Jews . . .”—I feel a not exactly tormenting, but…