Professor Frank Trommler,
University of Pennsylvania, in his study of the German literature elite during the Third Reich argues that Huch, along with
Ernst Wiechert,
Werner Bergengruen,
Reinhold Schneider,
Albrecht Haushofer and
Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen, took a courageous stand on issues such as the suppression of freedom, the fight against tyranny, the longing for privacy and the simple life. Their reputation was grounded in their ability to articulate their opinions and in doing so authors like Huch shaped the political and cultural transformation in Germany after the demise of the Third Reich. These authors were closely observed by Nazi authorities because they were widely read by the German middle-class. Huch was in her 70s when the Nazi seized power, and unlike authors such as
Thomas Mann who first fled into "inner emigration" and then went into exile, she took a stand against the Nazi doctrine from the outset. Huch continued to live in Germany, made no attempt to conceal her convictions and published in Germany through Swiss publishers. In 1934 Mann wrote of his intellectual struggle against the powers that be "Getting through it and maintaining one's own personal dignity and liberty is everything." When
Alfred Andersch assessed German literary output during the Nazi reign in 1947 he categorised Huch alongside
Gerhart Hauptmann,
Rudolf Alexander Schröder,
Hans Carossa and
Gertrud von Le Fort as older and established poets who had stayed in Germany and upheld a tradition of "bourgeois classicism". Andersch counted the poets
Stefan Andres,
Horst Lange,
Hans Leip,
Martin Raschke and
Eugen Gottlob Winkler among the younger generation who stayed in Germany and contributed to the resistance against Nazi authorities with their literary work. After World War II Thomas Mann honoured Huch as "the first lady of German letters". Ricarda Huch's collection
Autumn Fire, translated by Timothy Adès and with an introduction by Karen Leeder, was published in November 2024 by Poetry Salzburg. It is the first time that Huch's last poetry collection is available in English translation. Huch was nominated seven times - in 1928, 1935, 1937, and 1946 - for the Nobel Prize in Literature. Especially in 1937 Huch should have received the Nobel Prize. The nomination by Fritz Strich, Professor of German literature, literature historian, University of Bern, Switzerland, was supported by 27 professors from the universities of Bern, Basel, Geneva and Zurich in Switzerland, and Groningen, NL. In the same year she also received nominations by Heinrich Wölfflin, Art historian and a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences, and Knut Hjalmar Leonard Hammarskjöld, a lawyer, politician, and member of the Swedish Academy. == Publications by Huch ==