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- Paul Celan - Wikipedia
Paul Celan ( ˈsɛlæn ; [1] German: [ˈtseːlaːn]; born Paul Antschel; 23 November 1920 – c 20 April 1970) was a German-speaking Romanian [2] poet, Holocaust survivor, and literary translator
- Paul Celan | Biography, Poems, Books, Todesfuge, Death - Britannica
Paul Celan (born November 23, 1920, Cernăuți, Romania [now Chernivtsi, Ukraine]—died April 20?, 1970, Paris, France) was a Romanian-born poet who, though he never lived in Germany, gave the post-World War II literature of that country one of its most powerful and regenerative voices
- Paul Celan | The Poetry Foundation
Paul Celan was born Paul Antschel in Czernovitz, Romania, to a German-speaking Jewish family His surname was later spelled Ancel, and he eventually adopted the anagram Celan as his pen name In 1938 Celan went to Paris to study medicine, but returned to Romania before the outbreak of World War II
- Celan at 100 | Jewish Currents
Celan—born Paul Antschel in Czernowitz, Romania (now part of Ukraine) in 1920—lived a life scarred by personal and historical tragedy In 1942, his parents were taken to a Nazi concentration camp, where they both died; Celan himself survived eighteen months in a labor camp
- Paul Celan - New World Encyclopedia
Paul Celan (November 23, 1920 – approximately April 20, 1970), was the most frequently used pseudonym of Paul Antschel, a Jewish author who wrote primarily in German, one of the major European poets of the post-World War II era Celan's poetry is among some of the darkest written in the twentieth century
- Celan Biography
Paul Celan was born in Czernovitz, in Romania, in 1920 Until 1918, this region of Romania had formed part of the Austro-Hungarian empire, a polyglot amalgam of nations stretching from Austria in the west to the Balkans in the south-east
- Paul Celan - Oxford Reference
Romanian-born Jewish poet whose works, written in German, evoke the horrors of the Holocaust Celan lost both of his parents during World War II in the German death camps, and he himself was interned in a Romanian labour camp in 1944 These experiences, he felt, left only language intact for him
- How Paul Celan Reconceived Language for a Post-Holocaust World
Celan cleansed the language by breaking it down, bringing it back to its roots, creating a radical strangeness in expression and tone
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