Rose Ausländer

Rose Ausländer
Born Rosalie Beatrice Scherzer
(1901-05-11)May 11, 1901
Czernowitz, Duchy of Bukovina, Austria-Hungary
Died January 3, 1988(1988-01-03) (aged 86)
Düsseldorf, West Germany
Occupation poet, newspaper editor, bank clerk, foreign correspondent
Language German, English, Yiddish, Hebrew
Citizenship German, US
Genres expressionism, Neue Sachlichkeit, modern poetry
Subjects nature, homeland, shoah, love and death
Notable works Blinder Sommer
Years active 1921-1986
Spouse Ignaz Ausländer (October 19, 1923 - 1931)
Partner Helios Hecht (1927-1934)
Children none

Rose Ausländer (May 11, 1901 – January 3, 1988), maiden name Rosalie Beatrice Scherzer, was a Jewish German language and English language poet. Born in Czernowitz in the Bukovina, she lived through its tumultuous history of belonging to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kingdom of Romania, and eventually the Soviet Union. She was torn between her home land, caring for her ailing mother, and the United States, and finally settled in West Germany. Ausländer owned only two suitcases throughout her life.[1]

Her work spans from expressionism over Neue Sachlichkeit to modern. The Nazi regime pulped her first poetry book in 1939, and it took 26 years until she published a second.

Biography

Early life and education, 1901-1920

Rose Ausländer was born in Czernowitz, Bukovina, to a German speaking Jewish family. At the time Chernowitz was part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Her father Sigmund (Süssi) Scherzer (1871–1920) was from a small town near Czernowitz, and her mother Kathi Etie Rifke Binder (1873–1947) was born in Czernowitz to a German-speaking family.[2] From 1907 and 1919, she went to school in Czernowitz. In 1916 her family fled the Russian Occupying Army to Vienna but returned to Cernauti, Bukovina which was given the name 'Cernauti' and became part of the Kingdom of Romania after 1918.

In 1919, she began studying literature and philosophy in Cernauti. At this time, she developed a lifelong interest in the philosopher Constantin Brunner. After her father died in 1920 she left university.

New York, 1921-1927

In 1921, she migrated to the United States with her university friend and future husband Ignaz Ausländer. In Minneapolis she worked as an editor for the German language newspaper Westlicher Herold and was a collaborator of the anthology Amerika-Herold-Kalender, in which she published her first poems. In 1922, she moved with Ausländer to New York City, whom she married there on October 19, 1923. She separated from Ausländer three years later aged 25, and kept his last name. She became an American citizen in 1926.[3]:7 In the cycle of poems New York (1926/27), the expressionist pathos of her early work yields to a cool-controlled language of Neue Sachlichkeit. Her interest in the ideas of the Spinoza inspired philosopher Constantin Brunner, next to Plato, Sigmund Freud and others is a topic of later essays, that have disappeared.[4]

Cernauti and New York 1926-1931

From 1926-28 she returned home to Cernauti to take care of her sick mother. There, she met graphologist Helios Hecht, who became her partner. In 1928 she went back to New York with Hecht. She published poems in the "New Yorker Volkszeitung" and in Vorwärts until 1931.[3]

Cernauti 1931-1945

In 1931, she returned to look after her mother again, working for the newspaper Czernowitzer Morgenblatt until 1940. She lost her US citizenship by 1934, because she had not been in the US for more than 3 years. She separated from Hecht that year.[3] She was in a relationship with Hecht until 1936, when she left for Bucharest.

At the beginning of 1939, she traveled to Paris and New York, but once more returned to Czernowitz to take care of her sick mother. In 1939, her first volume of poems, Der Regenbogen (The Rainbow) was published with the help of her mentor, the Bukovinian writer Alfred Margul-Sperber.[3] Even though critics received it favorably, it was not accepted by the public. The greater part of the print run was destroyed when Nazi Germany occupied Cernauti in 1941.[4]

From October 1941 - 1944 she worked as a forced laborer (Zwangsarbeiter) in the ghetto of Cernauti. She remained there with her mother and brother for two years,[4] and another year in hiding so as not to be deported to the Nazi concentration camps.[3]

In the spring of 1943 Ausländer met poet Paul Celan in the Cernauti ghetto. He later used Ausländer's image of "black milk" of a 1939 poem in his well-known poem Todesfuge published in 1948. Ausländer herself is recorded as saying that Celan's usage was "self-explanatory, as the poet may take all material to transmute in his own poetry. It's an honour to me that a great poet found a stimulus in my own modest work".[5]4 In the spring of 1944, the Bukowina became part of the Soviet Union. Ausländer worked in the Cernauti city library until September 1944.[3]

New York, 1944-1966

In October 1944, Ausländer returned to live in New York. In 1947, her mother died and Ausländer suffered a physical collapse.[3] From 1948 - 1956 Ausländer wrote her poems only in English.[6] From 1953 - 1961 she made a living by working as a foreign correspondent at a shipping company in New York, and obtained US citizenship again in 1948.[4]

While attending the New York City Writer's Conference at Wagner College, Staten Island, Ausländer met poet Marianne Moore. This was the beginning of a friendship documented in several letters, in which Moore advised Ausländer on her writing and finally encouraged her to return to writing poetry in German. Several of Ausländer's English poems are dedicated to Moore.[7]

In 1957, she met Paul Celan in Paris again, with whom she discussed modern poetry, poem and shoah. She returned to her mother tongue.[3] Celan encouraged her "to radically change her poetic style, which had been solemn and plangent, influenced by Hölderlin and Trakl, yielding to a no-frills, ever more musical-rhythmic clarity". In 1963 she spent time in Vienna, where she published her first book since 1939.[3] The public welcomed Blinder Sommer (Blind summer) enthusiastically.[4]

Düsseldorf, 1967-1988

In 1967, she remigrated to Europe. After an unsuccessful attempt to settle in Vienna, she finally moved to Düsseldorf.[3] She first lived in a pension on Poensgenstraße 9 near the rail road station. She was invited to read her poems at the legendary Oberkasseler pub Sassafras. [8] Here she created her expansive late work in rapid sequence and several major pushes. After an accident she moved in the Nelly Sachs Home for the elderly starting in 1972.[3] Severely affected by arthritis and bedridden from 1978 onward she still created a large part of her work, dictating her texts until 1986, as she was not able to write by herself. She died in Düsseldorf in 1988.[4]

Works

Ausländer wrote more than 3000 poems, essentially revolving around the topics of "Heimat" (home land, Bukowina), childhood, relationship to her mother, Judaism (Schoah, exile), language (as a medium of expression and of home), love, ageing and death. With any poem written after 1945 one has to consider that it is influenced by her experience of the Schoah whether it directly deals with the topic or not. Ausländer lived in the hope that writing was still possible, not the least because she derived her identity from writing: "Wer bin ich / wenn ich nicht schreibe?" (Who am I / if not writing?).[4]

Posthumous work

References

  1. Kirsten Krick-Aigner (n.d.). "Rose Ausländer". Encyclopedia. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  2. Rose Ausländers Leben und Dichtung (Rose Ausländer life and poetry). "Ein denkendes Herz, das singt" ("A thinking heart that sings")]
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Bolbecher, Siglinde; Kaiser, Konstantin (2002). "Rose Ausländer" (PDF). Lexikon der Österreichischen Literatur im Exil. (in German). Universität Salzburg. p. 205. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Rose Ausländer". Lyrikline.org. Literaturwerkstatt Berlin. n.d. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  5. Cited in Forstner, Leonard (1985). "Todesfuge: Paul Celan, Immanuel Weissglas and the Psalmist", in German Life and Letters, (October 1985), Vol 39, Issue 1, p. 10
  6. Braun, Helmut (1999). "Ich bin fünftausend Jahre jung" : Rose Ausländer : zu ihrer Biographie. Stuttgart: Radius. ISBN 9783871731785.
  7. Ausländer, Rose (1995). The Forbidden Tree. Englische Gedichte. Fischer Taschenbuch. ISBN 978-3596111534.
  8. "Rose Ausländer" (in German). Stadt Düsseldorf. n.d. Retrieved 11 May 2016.

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.