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My Gaze Is Turned Inward: Letters 1938-1943 (Jewish Lives)
 
 
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My Gaze Is Turned Inward: Letters 1938-1943 (Jewish Lives) [Hardcover]

Gertrud Kolmar (Author), Johanna Woltmann (Editor, Afterword), Brigitte Goldstein (Translator)

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Book Description

Jewish Lives August 26, 2004
My Gaze is Turned Inward contains the letters written by a gifted Jewish poet living in Nazi German, shortly before her murder at Auschwitz.

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From the Back Cover

Events of the time are a bit like Impressionist paintings . . . which combine into a recognizable whole only when observed from a distance.-Gertrud Kolmar, in a letter to her sister, October 22, 1939 So a picture of Gertrud Kolmar, a gifted Jewish writer struggling to sustain her art and her family in the midst of the encroaching horrors of Nazi Germany, emerges clearly from these eloquent and allusive letters. Written in the stolen moments before her day as a forced laborer in a munitions factory began, the letters tell of Kolmar's move from the family home in Fikenbrug to a three-room flat in Berlin, which she and her father must soon share with three other displaced Jews. They describe her factory work as a kind of learning experience, and assert, in the face of ever-worsening conditions, that true art, never dependent on comfort or peace, is "capable of triumphing over . . . time and place." Indeed, her letters are a triumph of art, transforming an externally adverse fate and communicating the freedom of the human will in the midst of unfreedom. Prevented by the strict censorship of the time from saying too much too directly, Kolmar nonetheless manages to convey the intensity and determination of her inner world as well as the relentlessness of the outer world bent on crushing her. For their insight into the mind and soul of a poet paradoxically submitting to and defying fate, and for their interior vision of one of history's darkest moments, these letters can be read as a unique document of literary, historical, and spiritual power.

About the Author

The poet Gertrud Kolmar was born into a prominent Jewish family in Berlin in 1894 and died in Auschwitz sometime after February 1943.

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