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  1. Hans Adler (1880, in Vienna – 1957) was a German author of humorous poems, many of which appeared in the magazine Simplicissimus and were later collected in the volume Affentheater.

  2. Hans Günther Adler (2 July 1910 – 21 August 1988) was a Czech-English German-language poet and novelist, scholar, and Holocaust survivor. [1]

  3. Aug 25, 1988 · Hans Gunther Adler, 78, a scholar and German-language author who wrote about his years in Nazi concentration camps.

  4. Sep 3, 2019 · This article discusses the work of the Prague Jewish writer H. G. (Hans Günther) Adler (1910–1988) as an important contribution to the poetics of German-Jewish displacement in the wake of World War II. It demonstrates the significance of Adler’s early response to questions of refugee status, displacement and human rights in literature.

  5. On 11 February 1947, Adler emigrated to England and lived as a self-employed academic, author and lyrical poet in London. He dedicated himself to the task of depicting the persecution and extermination of European Jews.

  6. Jun 22, 2020 · Adler bore witness in poetry and prose, in the dry statistics and smallest details life at that ghetto/concentration camp/transit camp. He wrote from contending perspectives: observer and participant, scholar and survivor, historian and poet, novelist and an essayist.

  7. Mar 13, 2019 · Hans Günther Adler was one of them. It was here of all places that Adler, who had just turned 33 the previous day, stood to give a lecture on July 3, 1943, in honor of what would have been Kafka’s 60th birthday to about one hundred people in “Barracks B V,” known as the “Magdeburg Barracks.”