Margarete Susman was a German-Jewish poet, writer, and critic who lived much of her life in Switzerland. The author of hundreds of essays, five collections of poetry, and notable literary-critical works, she distinguished herself as a philosophical writer addressing vital questions in literature, politics, culture and religion. Her 1946 work Das Buch Hiob und das Schicksal des jüdischen Volkes, a reflection on Jewish history through the lens of the Biblical book of Job, was one of the earliest postwar Jewish theological responses to the Holocaust.
Biography
Susman was born in Hamburg, the daughter of Adolph Susman, a businessman, and Jenni Susman. Her parents were of Jewish heritage, with a mostly secular outlook, and Susman received no formal Jewish education as a child. When she was around 10 or 11 years old, her family moved to Zurich, Switzerland. In Zurich she attended a public school for girls, where she was educated in the Protestant faith. Later, when she was in her twenties, she sought out further instruction in Judaism from the Reform rabbi Caesar Seligmann. Although her father would not consent to her attending Zurich University, she eventually studied art in Düsseldorf and Paris; and, later, art history and philosophy in Munich. In Munich she met Gertrud Kantorowicz, with whom she formed a lasting friendship. At the beginning of the 1900s she moved to Berlin, where she again studied philosophy, and participated in the seminars of Georg Simmel, who remained her friend and mentor until his death in 1918. In the circle around Simmel she also formed friendships with the religious philosopherMartin Buber and the philosopher and historian Bernhard Groethuysen. In the course of her art studies Susman met the painter and art historian Eduard von Bendemann, whom she married in 1906. Their son Erwin was born the same year. During the First World War the family lived in Rüschlikon, Switzerland, and afterward returned to Germany, settling in a small village in southern Germany, and later in Frankfurt am Main. Susman and her husband divorced in 1928. From 1907 through the end of the Weimar Republic, Susman was a regular contributor to the Frankfurter Zeitung. She also contributed to Buber's journal Der Jude, founded during World War I, and, after 1925, to the Frankfurt-based German-Jewish periodical Der Morgen. Following the seizure of power by Hitler and the National Socialists in Germany in 1933, Susman emigrated to Zurich, where she spent the rest of her life. There she came into close association with the Protestant socialist theologian Leonhard Ragaz, and became a contributor to Ragaz's journal Neue Wege. Not long before her death in Zurich, in 1966, Susmann completed a memoir, Ich habe viele leben gelebt.
Selected works
Poetry collections
Mein Land: Gedichte. 1901
Neue Gedichte. 1907
Vom Sinn der Liebe. 1912
Die Liebenden: drei dramatische Gedichte. 1917
Lieder von Tod und Erlösung. 1922
Aus sich wandelnder Zeit. 1953
Prose
Das Wesen der modernen deutschen Lyrik . 1910
Der Expressionismus . 1918
Die Frauen der Romantik . 1929. 3rd expanded and revised edition, 1960
Das Buch Hiob und das Schicksal des jüdischen Volkes . 1946
"God the creator". In: Nahum N. Glatzer, . Eugene, OR: Wipf and Stock, 2002.. p. 86-92. According to the editor's note, this piece is a translation of the introductory part of Susman's essay on Franz Kafka, contained in her book Gestalten und Kreise ; the translation was first published in the Labor Zionist periodical Jewish Frontier, vol. 23, September 1956