Literary Critic and Scholar

Susanne Klingenstein

22 articles 2006–2016

Susanne Klingenstein is a scholar and literary critic who contributed essays and book reviews to The Weekly Standard from 2006 to 2016. Her writing frequently explored German history, culture, and literature, as well as broader themes in intellectual and literary life. She is known for her academic work on Jewish intellectual history and German-American cultural topics.

Rome Is Burning

August 26, 2016 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

This book is a knockout, a severe blow to the brain and to the gut, having arrived at a time when Europeans and Americans have been thinking hard about the social and economic forces that can unhinge republics. Safeguarding the vulnerable structures that allow large and complex societies to live…

Stalin’s Orphans

September 7, 2015 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

When 55-year-old Stephen Pasceri walked into a Boston hospital last January and fatally shot Michael Davidson, a 44-year-old heart surgeon who had taken care of Pasceri’s late mother, his futile rage deprived others of a superb physician and changed in an instant the lives of Dr. Davidson’s three…

Survivor’s Soul

May 11, 2015 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

Since 1945, the top echelon of German literature has been dominated by a cadre of writers and critics who were children when Hitler came to power and on the brink of adulthood when the war was over. After two years in limbo, it fell to them, as members of the fabled literary Group 47, to restore…

Highly Recommended

December 8, 2014 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

If you need a break from the noxious violence in the daily news and find yourself searching for a recuperative nighttime read about the loony haplessness that is the byproduct of a free and prosperous culture—well, you can do no better than to curl up with this ingeniously conceived, wickedly…

Go East, Young Man

September 29, 2014 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

For digital natives, studying classic English and American literature in college is about as attractive as mowing the lawn. When authorities require it, digital natives will do it as a chore: They find a command of humanistic knowledge irrelevant to their sense of self. They see no compelling…

Zero Hour

August 11, 2014 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

The best novel of the 20th century was written as an argument against the ruling French literary critic, Charles Augustin Sainte-Beuve. He held that a writer’s life was the key to his or her literary work and that the life and letters must be parsed along with the work. Marcel Proust disagreed:…

On the Brink

December 16, 2013 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

"The first second of 1913. A gunshot rings out through the dark night. There’s a brief click, fingers tense on the trigger, then comes a second, dull report. The alarm is raised, the police dash to the scene and arrest the gunman straight away. His name is Louis Armstrong.” Armstrong is 12 years…

Franz K. on Trial

June 3, 2013 · book reviews, Magazine, Books and Arts

Nothing has been left unsaid about Franz Kafka (1883-1924), the Jewish insurance lawyer from Prague who conducted his work life in Czech, his personal life in German, and his nocturnal writer’s life in a highly condensed metaphoric language whose striking images reveal the absurd core in the human…

Seeing and Believing

February 11, 2013 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

In 1935, Ernst Gombrich, scion of a bourgeois Viennese Jewish family, and newly minted Ph.D. in art history, found himself out of work. Walter Neurath, a friend and publisher, asked him to look over an English history book for children and, if it was any good, to translate it into German. Neurath…

Attic Treasure

October 8, 2012 · Judaism, Magazine, Books and Arts

When Alice fell through her Oxford rabbit hole in 1865, she landed in a world in which the hidden elements of her imagination took on an oppressive materiality. The unknown land revealed to Alice might have changed her readers’ perception of childhood, if only they could have decoded what Alice…

On the Brink

February 20, 2012 · Nazis, Jewish, Magazine

The great tragedy of Yiddish literature is that, at the very moment when it was blossoming into modernity in all genres, its writers, audience, and cultural matrix were completely destroyed by the double knockout punch of German and Soviet anti-Semitism.

The German Voice

October 31, 2011 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

The way I got to Martin Walser, Germany’s most German writer and, at age 84, one of its national treasures, was to scrawl three lines on an envelope: Martin Walser, writer, Nussdorf am Bodensee.

Der Führer’s Girl

September 19, 2011 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

Eons ago, in 1989, when Germany was in the midst of its most intense phase of coming to grips with the murder of the European Jews by largely ordinary Germans, Times Books was planning a collection of essays subtitled “Contemporary Writers Make the Holocaust Personal.” The American writers’ task…

Un-superman

July 4, 2011 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

The Turbulent World

Of Greeks and Jews

October 25, 2010 · Leo Strauss, Magazine, Books and Arts

A poll conducted by the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life this fall finds that 43 percent of Jews do not know that Moses Maimonides, codifier of Jewish law, author of the Thirteen Principles of Faith, physician, and philosopher extraordinaire, was Jewish.

No Harm Done

August 31, 2009 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

Asklepios, Medicine, and the Politics of Healing in Fifth Century Greece

Anti-Hero Worship

February 23, 2009 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

Me and Kaminski

Safety First

October 20, 2008 · Magazine, Books and Arts, Susanne Klingenstein

On October 19, at the Frankfurt Book Fair, the German-born painter Anselm Kiefer will receive the Peace Prize of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association, Germany's most important award for cultural achievement.

The German Stain

November 10, 2006 · Blog, Susanne Klingenstein

GÜNTER GRASS self-destructed at the beginning of Europe's literary season. However, what, to foreign observers, may look like a near-fatal fall from the moral high horse Grass had saddled in the 1960s may not be the inevitable punishment for unbridled hubris. Rather, it may be a simple case of my…