Jean Améry (31 October 191217 October 1978), born Hans Chaim Maier, was an Austrian-born essayist who wrote about his experiences surviving the Holocaust. His most celebrated work, At the Mind's Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and Its Realities (1966), suggests that torture was "the essence" of the Third Reich. Other notable works included On Aging (1968) and On Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death (1976). He adopted the pseudonym Jean Améry after 1945. Améry died by suicide in 1978.

Formerly a philosophy and literature student in Vienna, Améry's participation in organized resistance against the Nazi occupation of Belgium resulted in his detainment and torture by the German Gestapo at Fort Breendonk, and several years of imprisonment in concentration camps. Améry survived internments in Auschwitz and Buchenwald, and was finally liberated at Bergen-Belsen in 1945. After the war he settled in Belgium.

Early life

Jean Améry was born as Hans Chaim Maier in Vienna, Austria, in 1912, to a Jewish father and a Catholic mother. Améry himself typically gave his birth name as Hans Mayer; some sources from his early childhood give the name Johann Mayer or Hanns Mayer. His father was killed in action in World War I in 1916. Améry was raised as a Catholic by his mother.

After his father’s death, his mother became the central figure in his upbringing. He attended school first in Vienna, then grew up for a time in Bad Ischl in the Salzkammergut in a predominantly Catholic milieu. In the 1923–24 school year he was admitted as a private student to the gymnasium in Gmunden, which he left in January 1925. In 1926 he and his mother returned to Vienna.

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. He trained as a bookseller and from 1930 to 1938 worked in the bookshop of the Volkshochschule Leopoldstadt. Although largely an autodidact, he also attended lectures at the University of Vienna as an auditor and came into contact with writers including Hermann Broch, Robert Musil, and Elias Canetti. The thought of the Vienna Circle also left a lasting mark on his intellectual development.

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."

During Nazi rule

thumb|The railway to Auschwitz

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, Regina, whom he had chosen in opposition to his mother's wishes.

According to the German article, he left Vienna with Regina on 31 December 1938, travelled via Cologne and Kalterherberg, and reached Belgium with the help of a smuggler. Arriving almost penniless, he received support from a Jewish relief committee in Antwerp. To survive in exile, he worked occasionally as a furniture mover and as a teacher at the École Moyenne Juive de Bruxelles.

His wife later died of heart disease while hiding in Brussels.

Améry was initially deported by the Belgian authorities to France as a German national and interned in the south of the country.

After escaping from the camp at Gurs, he returned to Belgium where he joined the Resistance movement.

After his arrest in 1943, he was first imprisoned at Saint-Gilles before being transferred to Fort Breendonk, where he was tortured. The German article specifies that this torture included whipping and suspension by the arms, which dislocated his shoulders.

Involved in the distribution of anti-military propaganda to the German occupying forces, Améry was captured by the Nazis in July 1943 and routinely 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 to Auschwitz.

Lacking any trade skills, he was initially assigned to harsh physical labor at Auschwitz III-Monowitz, helping to build the I.G. Farben Buna works. In June 1944 he was employed there as a clerk, and it was there that he met Primo Levi. When Auschwitz-Monowitz was evacuated in January 1945, he was deported to Mittelbau-Dora and then to Bergen-Belsen, where he was liberated by British forces in April 1945.

After the war

thumb|The main gate of [[Buchenwald Concentration Camp.]]

The former Hans Mayer began to publish under the pen name Jean Améry in 1955. He chose this pen name, comprising a French-sounding anagram of his family name and a French cognate of his first name, to symbolize his dissociation from German culture and his alliance with French culture.

Améry lived in Brussels, working as a culture journalist for German language newspapers in Switzerland. Although friends and supporters encouraged him to return to Austria after 1945, he chose not to resettle there. Even after recovering an Austrian passport, he did not take up residence in Austria, though he returned for annual visits. He refused to publish in Germany or Austria for many years, publishing only in Switzerland.

Heinz Kühn had already offered him a post in broadcasting in 1946, though he did not take it. For years he lived only precariously from his writing until mediation by Helmut Heißenbüttel improved his financial situation.

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 ("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.

He later married Maria Eschenauer-Leitner, who had helped his first wife while she was in hiding during the war. The German article describes her as a decisive supporting presence in his later life and work.

Death

Améry attempted suicide in Brussels in February 1974 and was rescued after being found in a coma by his friend Kurt Schindel. In farewell letters, he reportedly cited declining health and an inability to continue working as a writer.

In 1976 Améry published the book On Suicide: A Discourse on Voluntary Death. In 1978 he died by suicide in the Hotel Österreichischer Hof in Salzburg, by overdosing on sleeping pills. He was buried in an honorary grave at Vienna Central Cemetery.

Literary and philosophical legacy

thumb|Grave of Jean Améry at the [[Vienna Central Cemetery]]

His early literary attempts remained unpublished during his lifetime. Most notably, he was unable to place his youthful novel Die Schiffbrüchigen with a publisher despite encouraging responses from Thomas Mann and Robert Musil; part of it appeared in print in 1935, and the full text was published posthumously.

The publication of At the Mind's Limits, Améry's exploration of the Holocaust and the nature of the Third Reich, made him one of the 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,

In 1967 he sharply criticized Theodor W. Adorno, accusing him of philosophically capitalizing on Auschwitz in a language enamored of its own abstraction.

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". 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", 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: