<p>Nelly Sachs (1891-1970) has long been regarded as one of the most significant Holocaust poets. Her conception of language and words as a landscape has been understood by scholars and critics as an exilic ersatz Heimat&nbsp;for the lost German homeland of a displaced poet. This reading however is based entirely on her postwar poems. Such an isolated approach to her complex body of work is increasingly historically problematic; it is also at odds with Sachs&#39;s generally cyclical poetic process.</p><p>In &quot;The Space of Words&quot;&nbsp;Jennifer Hoyer offers the first sustained critical analysis of Sachs&#39;s largely unanalyzed prewar poetry and prose as well as the first analysis that examines structural and thematic ties between the prewar works and the Nobel Prize-winning postwar poetry. Through close readings of both Sachs&#39;s prewar and postwar works Hoyer reveals a diasporic rather than exilic conception of the landscape of language a position of constant wandering rather than static longing for return. This diasporic poetics promotes the intellectual and linguistic power of the wanderer and opens new insights into Sachs&#39;s essential significance as a Holocaust poet and a twentieth-century German-Jewish writer wary of the link of literary language to geopolitics and the narrative of nations.</p>
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