SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 16
Gertrud Kolmar
By: Taylor Turner
Early Life
   Gertrud Kolmar, pseudonym of Gertrud Chodziesner, was born on
    December 10, 1894 in Berlin, Germany. She was the oldest of four
    children of a middle class German family. Her parents were Ludwig
    Chodziesner, a criminal defense lawyer and Her mother Elise
    Chodziesner, who came from an intellectual mercantile family.
Early Life cont.
   From 1901 to 1911 Kolmar attended a private girls’ grammar school,
    continuing her studies at a women’s agricultural and home economics
    school in Arvershof near Leipzig. She worked at a public school as a
    kindergarten teacher. She studied Russian before receiving a teaching
    degree as a French and English language instructor and military
    interpreter in 1916.
   The following year Kolmar had her first and bitterly disappointing love
    affair, during which she became pregnant. Her parents forced her to have
    an abortion—surely a traumatic event at a time when abortions were
    illegal in Germany, which may explain Kolmar’s focus on childless
    women and mother figures in her poetry.
Germany
Germany in the Early 1900’s

    In 1914, World War I began between the great powers, which were the
    allies (United Kingdom, France, and Russia) and the central powers
    (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy). Thought as a way to settle
    disputes with neighboring countries, the war ultimately defeated
    Germany, causing 2.1 million military deaths, and 430,000 civilian deaths
    due to malnutrition from the food blockades.
   The war finally ended in November of 1918, resulting in Treaty of
    Versailles, a peace treaty between Germany and the Allied powers.
   It was in 1917, near the end of World War I, when Gertrud Kolmar wrote
    her first book, Gedichte, which drew little attention.
Early Life
   During the last two years of World War I she was also employed as an
    interpreter and censor of soldiers' correspondence in Doberitz, a prisoner-
    of-war-camp near Berlin, shown in picture below.
Early Life cont.
   At the end of World War I, Kolmar served as governess and teacher in
    private households. In 1927 she took a summer course at the University of
    Dijon, where she graduated with a teaching degree, achieving the highest
    honors ever given to a foreign student. After her mother fell terminally ill
    in 1928, Kolmar returned to Finkenkrug, running the household and
    caring for her mother until her death in 1930. She then took over her
    mother’s position in the household, became her father’s notary assistant,
    and focused on her own writing.
    Kolmar’s experiences of isolation and loneliness as a woman and Jew are
    expressed vividly in the poetry she wrote during this time of growing
    antisemitism.
Some of her most Famous works
   1930- Kolmar writes an autobiographical poem, Die Dichterin (The
    Woman Poet), where she pleads with the reader to respect her fragility:
    heart beats like that of a little bird/In your fist.
   1930-1931- Kolmar wrote her only novel, Die Jüdische Mutter (The
    Jewish Mother.
   1935- Cecile Renault, not yet published.
   1936- Three of Kolmar’s poems were published in a journal of the Jewish
    Book Club (Jüdische Buchvereinigung).
   1938- Nacht, not yet published.
Some of her most Famous works
   1938- Kolmar’s collection of poems, written ten years earlier, Die Frau
    und die Tiere (The Woman and the Beasts) was published by the Jewish
    Publishing Company Erwin Loewe.
   1940- Kolmar’s first short story, titled Susanna. The first-person narrator,
    an aging Jewish woman who is the governess of the depressed teen-aged
    Susanna who confesses: she didn’t know Judaism, “my faith and regards
    the Jewish neighborhood on the outskirts of the town,” where the Eastern
    European Jewish inhabitants speak Yiddish-German, as a “foreign world”
Sample of Works
   Click on the following link for my favorite of her poems, an English translation of
    Die Dichterin.
   http://allpoetry.com/poem/8628379-The_Woman_Poet__--
    _Translation_of_Die_Dichterin-by-Gertrud_Kolmar

   The following link is to one of Gertrud Kolmar’s poems which is made into a
    choral piece
   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bs44qjupLcg
Kolmar’s Life during WWI
   In 1938, as the antisemitic political and social climate became intolerable
    for Kolmar, she made plans to escape Nazi persecution by emigrating to
    England to work as a governess. Her sister Hilde Wenzel emigrated to
    Switzerland in 1938. That same year Kolmar and her father were forced
    to sell their house in Finkenburg and move to a so-called “Jewish house”
    in Berlin-Schöneberg. Despite terrible living conditions, it was during this
    time that Kolmar continued her writing, including Susanna, which she
    wrote out of a sense of her own powerlessness. In her effort to escape
    persecution Kolmar also sent her resumé to her uncle Fritz Crzellitzer,
    who had emigrated to Palestine.
Kolmar’s Life during WWI
   In 1940, hoping to emigrate to Palestine, Kolmar began to study Hebrew
    and write prose in this language, also translating a poem by Hayyim
    Nahman Bialik into German, as stated in letters sent to her sister.
    However, she was unable to leave Germany since proof of employment
    was necessary in order to receive a visa for Palestine. In mid-1941
    Kolmar was forced to work at an arms factory. Her eighty-one-year-old
    father’s dependence on her led her to remain with him until his
    deportation to Theresienstadt in September 1942, where he died the
    following year. Kolmar was arrested by the SS on February 27, 1943 and
    deported on March 2, 1943 with the “eastern transport” to Auschwitz. It
    can be assumed that at the time of her arrest and deportation the Nazis
    destroyed her personal papers, letters, and documents. The exact date of
    Kolmar’s death is unknown.
Literary Works
   Kolmar’s surviving work consists of four hundred and fifty poems, three
    plays, and two short stories that exist as manuscripts or typoscripts.
    Although much of her work has been published, some of it is also held at
    the Gertrud Kolmar archives in Marbach, Germany.
What she has left behind…
   “What little is known of Kolmar’s biography can be viewed in sharp contrast to the rich
    spiritual life made evident in her poetry. It is in the poems that the internal and intimate self
    rather than the external everyday existence is revealed. In the context of the process referred
    to as “coming to terms with one’s past” and a renewed appreciation for Kolmar’s work, the
    poet—as she wished to be identified—has reached an international audience which responds
    to the powerful attraction of her writing. Kolmar’s work is a vehicle for readers of the early
    twenty-first century to come to terms with the events of World War II and the Shoah, as well
    as for German-Jewish identity through reflection and remembrance.”
     (Kristen Krick-Aigner, 2005)
Her Impact on Me
   Throughout this semester, I have read many literary works written by strong
    women who faced many struggles, oppression, and the pains of life, but were
    courageous enough to share their stories with the world, in hopes of impacting it
    for the better. Gertrud Kolmar is one of many women who have done this, but I
    especially appreciate her story and her works, because of the interest that I have
    always taken in my own German heritage.
Bibliography
   Krick-Aigner, K. (2005). Gertrud Kolmar. Jewish Women’s Archive.
           Accessed on Nov. 26, 2012, from
           http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/kolmar-gertrud
   Kuhn, P. (2012). Gertrud Kolmar: Worlds. Shearsman Books.
           Accessed on Nov. 27, 2012, from
    http://www.shearsman.com/pages/books/catalog/2012/kolmar.html
   Smith, H. (2010). The woman poet- A translation of die dichterin. All
           Poetry. Accessed on Nov. 27, 2012, from www.allpoetry.com
   Zohn, H. (2008). Gertrud Kolmar. Jewish Virtual Library. Accessed on
           Nov. 26, 2012, from
           http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

M Holmes W Faulkner
M Holmes W FaulknerM Holmes W Faulkner
M Holmes W Faulknermholmes40666
 
Famous Poems And Poets
Famous Poems And PoetsFamous Poems And Poets
Famous Poems And PoetsVDtracy
 
William Faulkner Introductory
William Faulkner IntroductoryWilliam Faulkner Introductory
William Faulkner Introductoryguest12397a
 
Saroyan
SaroyanSaroyan
SaroyanSona8
 
Faulkner Intro
Faulkner IntroFaulkner Intro
Faulkner IntroDeMaria18
 
Sound and the fury
Sound and the furySound and the fury
Sound and the furyDisha Kariya
 
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernanta
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernantaBiography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernanta
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernantaEvika Ernanta
 
William faulkner
William faulknerWilliam faulkner
William faulknerLee Gray
 
New microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationNew microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationSona8
 
Henry wadsworth longfellow
Henry wadsworth longfellowHenry wadsworth longfellow
Henry wadsworth longfellow18scarke
 
William Saroyan
William SaroyanWilliam Saroyan
William SaroyanSona8
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Emily bronte
Emily bronteEmily bronte
Emily bronte
 
M Holmes W Faulkner
M Holmes W FaulknerM Holmes W Faulkner
M Holmes W Faulkner
 
English Dramatists
English DramatistsEnglish Dramatists
English Dramatists
 
Famous Poems And Poets
Famous Poems And PoetsFamous Poems And Poets
Famous Poems And Poets
 
Virginia woolf
Virginia woolfVirginia woolf
Virginia woolf
 
William Faulkner Introductory
William Faulkner IntroductoryWilliam Faulkner Introductory
William Faulkner Introductory
 
William faulknergggg
William faulknerggggWilliam faulknergggg
William faulknergggg
 
William faulkner
William faulknerWilliam faulkner
William faulkner
 
Saroyan
SaroyanSaroyan
Saroyan
 
Faulkner Intro
Faulkner IntroFaulkner Intro
Faulkner Intro
 
William faulkner
William faulknerWilliam faulkner
William faulkner
 
Sound and the fury
Sound and the furySound and the fury
Sound and the fury
 
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernanta
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernantaBiography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernanta
Biography of william faulkner by evika ventik ernanta
 
William faulkner
William faulknerWilliam faulkner
William faulkner
 
New microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentationNew microsoft office power point presentation
New microsoft office power point presentation
 
Henry james
Henry jamesHenry james
Henry james
 
Henry wadsworth longfellow
Henry wadsworth longfellowHenry wadsworth longfellow
Henry wadsworth longfellow
 
William faulkner
William faulknerWilliam faulkner
William faulkner
 
William Saroyan
William SaroyanWilliam Saroyan
William Saroyan
 
English (1)
English (1)English (1)
English (1)
 

Ähnlich wie Women in Literature PPT

W H Auden's poetry themes
W H Auden's poetry themesW H Auden's poetry themes
W H Auden's poetry themesSamiulhaq32
 
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”Jheel Barad
 
Romanticism period
Romanticism periodRomanticism period
Romanticism periodnina isna
 
War poem vs_romantic_poem_
War poem vs_romantic_poem_War poem vs_romantic_poem_
War poem vs_romantic_poem_Nidhi Jethava
 
Hungary′s most famous authors
Hungary′s most famous authorsHungary′s most famous authors
Hungary′s most famous authorsKerim Sivrikaya
 
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story Hema Goswami
 
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptx
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptxMuhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptx
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptxMyaqoob5
 
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docx
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docxIntroduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docx
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docxnormanibarber20063
 
Pt t4
Pt t4Pt t4
Pt t4M.E.
 
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone Cregge
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone CreggeHE503 Fall 14 Capstone Cregge
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone CreggeKyle Cregge
 
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III TheRoma.docx
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III  TheRoma.docx193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III  TheRoma.docx
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III TheRoma.docxfelicidaddinwoodie
 
Amaro Villalaz
Amaro VillalazAmaro Villalaz
Amaro VillalazJohan
 
Herbert Garcia
Herbert GarciaHerbert Garcia
Herbert GarciaJohan
 
Polish poets and writers
Polish poets and writersPolish poets and writers
Polish poets and writersMehmet Tokgöz
 

Ähnlich wie Women in Literature PPT (20)

W H Auden's poetry themes
W H Auden's poetry themesW H Auden's poetry themes
W H Auden's poetry themes
 
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
Queer Theory In W.H. Auden’s “September 1, 1939”
 
Romanticism period
Romanticism periodRomanticism period
Romanticism period
 
War poem vs_romantic_poem_
War poem vs_romantic_poem_War poem vs_romantic_poem_
War poem vs_romantic_poem_
 
Hungary′s most famous authors
Hungary′s most famous authorsHungary′s most famous authors
Hungary′s most famous authors
 
The twentieth century to 1939
The twentieth century to 1939The twentieth century to 1939
The twentieth century to 1939
 
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story
Unit 3 of Paper II: Fiction, short story
 
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptx
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptxMuhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptx
Muhammad Kashif (S.T coleridge).pptx
 
The Diary of Anne Frank
The Diary of Anne FrankThe Diary of Anne Frank
The Diary of Anne Frank
 
World lit.
World lit.World lit.
World lit.
 
EXPOSICION INGLES.pptx
EXPOSICION INGLES.pptxEXPOSICION INGLES.pptx
EXPOSICION INGLES.pptx
 
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docx
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docxIntroduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docx
Introduction The Reed Anna Seghers, East Germany, 19.docx
 
Pt t4
Pt t4Pt t4
Pt t4
 
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone Cregge
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone CreggeHE503 Fall 14 Capstone Cregge
HE503 Fall 14 Capstone Cregge
 
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III TheRoma.docx
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III  TheRoma.docx193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III  TheRoma.docx
193Week Eight Reason andRevolution Part III TheRoma.docx
 
Amaro Villalaz
Amaro VillalazAmaro Villalaz
Amaro Villalaz
 
Herbert Garcia
Herbert GarciaHerbert Garcia
Herbert Garcia
 
Polish poets and writers
Polish poets and writersPolish poets and writers
Polish poets and writers
 
The Golden Notebook
The Golden NotebookThe Golden Notebook
The Golden Notebook
 
Imre kertesz
Imre kerteszImre kertesz
Imre kertesz
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...Sapna Thakur
 
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinStudent login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinRaunakKeshri1
 
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptxThe byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptxShobhayan Kirtania
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfciinovamais
 
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...fonyou31
 
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...anjaliyadav012327
 
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactdawncurless
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeThiyagu K
 
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Sapana Sha
 
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdfWeb & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdfJayanti Pande
 
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdf
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdfDisha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdf
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdfchloefrazer622
 
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformA Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformChameera Dedduwage
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxheathfieldcps1
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104misteraugie
 
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxOrganic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxVS Mahajan Coaching Centre
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13Steve Thomason
 
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3JemimahLaneBuaron
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionSafetyChain Software
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (20)

BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
 
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpinStudent login on Anyboli platform.helpin
Student login on Anyboli platform.helpin
 
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptxThe byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
The byproduct of sericulture in different industries.pptx
 
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdfActivity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
Activity 01 - Artificial Culture (1).pdf
 
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
Ecosystem Interactions Class Discussion Presentation in Blue Green Lined Styl...
 
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...
JAPAN: ORGANISATION OF PMDA, PHARMACEUTICAL LAWS & REGULATIONS, TYPES OF REGI...
 
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impactAccessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
Accessible design: Minimum effort, maximum impact
 
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and ModeMeasures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
Measures of Central Tendency: Mean, Median and Mode
 
Código Creativo y Arte de Software | Unidad 1
Código Creativo y Arte de Software | Unidad 1Código Creativo y Arte de Software | Unidad 1
Código Creativo y Arte de Software | Unidad 1
 
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
Call Girls in Dwarka Mor Delhi Contact Us 9654467111
 
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdfWeb & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
Web & Social Media Analytics Previous Year Question Paper.pdf
 
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdf
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdfDisha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdf
Disha NEET Physics Guide for classes 11 and 12.pdf
 
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy ReformA Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
A Critique of the Proposed National Education Policy Reform
 
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptxThe basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
The basics of sentences session 2pptx copy.pptx
 
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
Nutritional Needs Presentation - HLTH 104
 
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptxOrganic Name Reactions  for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
Organic Name Reactions for the students and aspirants of Chemistry12th.pptx
 
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
The Most Excellent Way | 1 Corinthians 13
 
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3
Q4-W6-Restating Informational Text Grade 3
 
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptxINDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
INDIA QUIZ 2024 RLAC DELHI UNIVERSITY.pptx
 
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory InspectionMastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
Mastering the Unannounced Regulatory Inspection
 

Women in Literature PPT

  • 2. Early Life  Gertrud Kolmar, pseudonym of Gertrud Chodziesner, was born on December 10, 1894 in Berlin, Germany. She was the oldest of four children of a middle class German family. Her parents were Ludwig Chodziesner, a criminal defense lawyer and Her mother Elise Chodziesner, who came from an intellectual mercantile family.
  • 3. Early Life cont.  From 1901 to 1911 Kolmar attended a private girls’ grammar school, continuing her studies at a women’s agricultural and home economics school in Arvershof near Leipzig. She worked at a public school as a kindergarten teacher. She studied Russian before receiving a teaching degree as a French and English language instructor and military interpreter in 1916.  The following year Kolmar had her first and bitterly disappointing love affair, during which she became pregnant. Her parents forced her to have an abortion—surely a traumatic event at a time when abortions were illegal in Germany, which may explain Kolmar’s focus on childless women and mother figures in her poetry.
  • 5. Germany in the Early 1900’s  In 1914, World War I began between the great powers, which were the allies (United Kingdom, France, and Russia) and the central powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy). Thought as a way to settle disputes with neighboring countries, the war ultimately defeated Germany, causing 2.1 million military deaths, and 430,000 civilian deaths due to malnutrition from the food blockades.  The war finally ended in November of 1918, resulting in Treaty of Versailles, a peace treaty between Germany and the Allied powers.  It was in 1917, near the end of World War I, when Gertrud Kolmar wrote her first book, Gedichte, which drew little attention.
  • 6. Early Life  During the last two years of World War I she was also employed as an interpreter and censor of soldiers' correspondence in Doberitz, a prisoner- of-war-camp near Berlin, shown in picture below.
  • 7. Early Life cont.  At the end of World War I, Kolmar served as governess and teacher in private households. In 1927 she took a summer course at the University of Dijon, where she graduated with a teaching degree, achieving the highest honors ever given to a foreign student. After her mother fell terminally ill in 1928, Kolmar returned to Finkenkrug, running the household and caring for her mother until her death in 1930. She then took over her mother’s position in the household, became her father’s notary assistant, and focused on her own writing.  Kolmar’s experiences of isolation and loneliness as a woman and Jew are expressed vividly in the poetry she wrote during this time of growing antisemitism.
  • 8. Some of her most Famous works  1930- Kolmar writes an autobiographical poem, Die Dichterin (The Woman Poet), where she pleads with the reader to respect her fragility: heart beats like that of a little bird/In your fist.  1930-1931- Kolmar wrote her only novel, Die Jüdische Mutter (The Jewish Mother.  1935- Cecile Renault, not yet published.  1936- Three of Kolmar’s poems were published in a journal of the Jewish Book Club (Jüdische Buchvereinigung).  1938- Nacht, not yet published.
  • 9. Some of her most Famous works  1938- Kolmar’s collection of poems, written ten years earlier, Die Frau und die Tiere (The Woman and the Beasts) was published by the Jewish Publishing Company Erwin Loewe.  1940- Kolmar’s first short story, titled Susanna. The first-person narrator, an aging Jewish woman who is the governess of the depressed teen-aged Susanna who confesses: she didn’t know Judaism, “my faith and regards the Jewish neighborhood on the outskirts of the town,” where the Eastern European Jewish inhabitants speak Yiddish-German, as a “foreign world”
  • 10. Sample of Works  Click on the following link for my favorite of her poems, an English translation of Die Dichterin.  http://allpoetry.com/poem/8628379-The_Woman_Poet__-- _Translation_of_Die_Dichterin-by-Gertrud_Kolmar  The following link is to one of Gertrud Kolmar’s poems which is made into a choral piece  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bs44qjupLcg
  • 11. Kolmar’s Life during WWI  In 1938, as the antisemitic political and social climate became intolerable for Kolmar, she made plans to escape Nazi persecution by emigrating to England to work as a governess. Her sister Hilde Wenzel emigrated to Switzerland in 1938. That same year Kolmar and her father were forced to sell their house in Finkenburg and move to a so-called “Jewish house” in Berlin-Schöneberg. Despite terrible living conditions, it was during this time that Kolmar continued her writing, including Susanna, which she wrote out of a sense of her own powerlessness. In her effort to escape persecution Kolmar also sent her resumé to her uncle Fritz Crzellitzer, who had emigrated to Palestine.
  • 12. Kolmar’s Life during WWI  In 1940, hoping to emigrate to Palestine, Kolmar began to study Hebrew and write prose in this language, also translating a poem by Hayyim Nahman Bialik into German, as stated in letters sent to her sister. However, she was unable to leave Germany since proof of employment was necessary in order to receive a visa for Palestine. In mid-1941 Kolmar was forced to work at an arms factory. Her eighty-one-year-old father’s dependence on her led her to remain with him until his deportation to Theresienstadt in September 1942, where he died the following year. Kolmar was arrested by the SS on February 27, 1943 and deported on March 2, 1943 with the “eastern transport” to Auschwitz. It can be assumed that at the time of her arrest and deportation the Nazis destroyed her personal papers, letters, and documents. The exact date of Kolmar’s death is unknown.
  • 13. Literary Works  Kolmar’s surviving work consists of four hundred and fifty poems, three plays, and two short stories that exist as manuscripts or typoscripts. Although much of her work has been published, some of it is also held at the Gertrud Kolmar archives in Marbach, Germany.
  • 14. What she has left behind…  “What little is known of Kolmar’s biography can be viewed in sharp contrast to the rich spiritual life made evident in her poetry. It is in the poems that the internal and intimate self rather than the external everyday existence is revealed. In the context of the process referred to as “coming to terms with one’s past” and a renewed appreciation for Kolmar’s work, the poet—as she wished to be identified—has reached an international audience which responds to the powerful attraction of her writing. Kolmar’s work is a vehicle for readers of the early twenty-first century to come to terms with the events of World War II and the Shoah, as well as for German-Jewish identity through reflection and remembrance.” (Kristen Krick-Aigner, 2005)
  • 15. Her Impact on Me  Throughout this semester, I have read many literary works written by strong women who faced many struggles, oppression, and the pains of life, but were courageous enough to share their stories with the world, in hopes of impacting it for the better. Gertrud Kolmar is one of many women who have done this, but I especially appreciate her story and her works, because of the interest that I have always taken in my own German heritage.
  • 16. Bibliography  Krick-Aigner, K. (2005). Gertrud Kolmar. Jewish Women’s Archive. Accessed on Nov. 26, 2012, from http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/kolmar-gertrud  Kuhn, P. (2012). Gertrud Kolmar: Worlds. Shearsman Books. Accessed on Nov. 27, 2012, from http://www.shearsman.com/pages/books/catalog/2012/kolmar.html  Smith, H. (2010). The woman poet- A translation of die dichterin. All Poetry. Accessed on Nov. 27, 2012, from www.allpoetry.com  Zohn, H. (2008). Gertrud Kolmar. Jewish Virtual Library. Accessed on Nov. 26, 2012, from http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org