Ruth Klüger: Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1931-2020) was a survivor of the Holocaust with a long career in academia who was Professor Emerita of German Studies at the University of California, Irvine.  
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' '''Angress''' (1931-2020) was a Jewish woman and Holocaust survivor born in Vienna, Austria. She was a professor at the University of California at Irvine from 1976-1980 and again from 1986 until her retirement in 1994.<ref>Web. [https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/klueger-ruth Ruth Klüger], Alfers, Sandra, Jewish Women's Archive, 23 June, 2021, retrieved 16 June, 2022. </ref>
 
== Early Life ==
Her family lived in Austria until 1942, when she and her mother were forced into concentration camps and her father, a gynecologist, was killed. In 1947, she moved to the United States, where she eventually became a professor. Klüger, still a recognized authority on German literature, worked at several prestigious universities, including University of California Irvine, Princeton, and the University of Virginia.<ref>Web. [https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/16/us/ruth-kluger-dies.html Ruth Kluger, Author of a Haunting Holocaust Memoir, Dies at 88], Roberts, Sam, The New York Times, 16 October, 2020, retrieved 16 June, 2022. </ref>
 
==Time at the University of Virginia==
She was particularly drawn to the University of Virginia in 1973 because of its founder Thomas Jefferson. She left just three years later in protest of President Hereford’s views on race, which she believed to be anti-Jeffersonian.
 
== Frances Brand portrait ==
Klüger is one of several people commemorated by the late 20th-century artist [[Frances Brand]] as part of her ''Firsts'' series. In that painting, she is identified as ''Ruth Angress''.<ref>Branigan, Michelle Marie (December 1998). ''A Biography of Frances Brand, an American Painter and Social Activist'' (PhD). Indiana University.</ref>


{{Wikipedia link|Ruth_Klüger|whylink=wellcovered|linktext=Ruth Klüger}}
{{Wikipedia link|Ruth_Klüger|whylink=wellcovered|linktext=Ruth Klüger}}


{{bio-stub}}
{{bio-stub}}
==Time at the University of Virginia==
Klüger came to the University of Virginia in [[1973]] to study philosophy. She left in protest in [[1976]]. {{fact}}
Klüger is one of the many people painted by artist [[Frances Brand]] as part of her ''Firsts'' series. In that painting, she is identified as ''Ruth Angress''.


==References==
==References==
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==External Links==
==External Links==
*https://web.archive.org/web/20100505085048/http://albemarlehistory.org/index.php/Historical_Society/exhibits_detailed/exhibits_ruth_angress/ Portrait on archived version of the Albemarle Charlottesville Historical Society's webpage]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Klüger, Ruth}}  
{{DEFAULTSORT:Klüger, Ruth}}  


[[Category: Subject of a Frances Brand "Firsts" painting]]
[[Category: Subject of a Frances Brand "Firsts" painting]]

Latest revision as of 03:13, 22 June 2022

Ruth Klüger Angress (1931-2020) was a Jewish woman and Holocaust survivor born in Vienna, Austria. She was a professor at the University of California at Irvine from 1976-1980 and again from 1986 until her retirement in 1994.[1]

Early Life

Her family lived in Austria until 1942, when she and her mother were forced into concentration camps and her father, a gynecologist, was killed. In 1947, she moved to the United States, where she eventually became a professor. Klüger, still a recognized authority on German literature, worked at several prestigious universities, including University of California Irvine, Princeton, and the University of Virginia.[2]

Time at the University of Virginia

She was particularly drawn to the University of Virginia in 1973 because of its founder Thomas Jefferson. She left just three years later in protest of President Hereford’s views on race, which she believed to be anti-Jeffersonian.

Frances Brand portrait

Klüger is one of several people commemorated by the late 20th-century artist Frances Brand as part of her Firsts series. In that painting, she is identified as Ruth Angress.[3]


People.jpg This biographical article is a stub. You can help cvillepedia by expanding it.

References

  1. Web. Ruth Klüger, Alfers, Sandra, Jewish Women's Archive, 23 June, 2021, retrieved 16 June, 2022.
  2. Web. Ruth Kluger, Author of a Haunting Holocaust Memoir, Dies at 88, Roberts, Sam, The New York Times, 16 October, 2020, retrieved 16 June, 2022.
  3. Branigan, Michelle Marie (December 1998). A Biography of Frances Brand, an American Painter and Social Activist (PhD). Indiana University.

External Links