The legacy of exile : lives, letters, literature

書誌事項

The legacy of exile : lives, letters, literature

edited by Deborah Vietor-Engländer

Blackwell, 1998

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 1

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

"This text was originally published as a special number (51:2) of German life and letters"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This study of exile is not restricted to literature alone. "Life" is represented by a very personal account of a teenager's experience of exile and his unsuccessful battles with bureaucracy to save his family - a teenager who subsequently achieved renown in the field of exile studies. Another by a study of a mysterious puller of strings in the exile world who outwitted the bureaucrats and helped many people in need, and by new insights into the life of Kurt Hiller, a prominent literary figure whose career was destroyed by some 20 years of exile. Another contribution indicates the rich harvest of material which was collected by Third Reich bureaucrats and is still to be reaped in archives. Two studies deal with new aspects of individual exile works, two specifically with the role of women in exile, one with the German-speaking exiles in Scandinavia and one with the problems of editing the diaries of one of the most famous exiles of all, Thomas Mann.

目次

1. The Americanization of Gunther: Guy Stern (Wayne State University). 2. "The Mysteries of Rudolfo": Rudolf Kommer - A Puller of Strings on the 3. Exile Scene: Deborah Vietor-Englander (Technical University of Darmstadt). Uberwacht und Ausgeburgert: Klaus Mann und Erika Mann in den Akten des Dritten Reiches: Alexander Stephan (University of Florida). 4. A Woman's Place...?: German-speaking Women in Exile in Britain, 1933-1945: Chairman Brinson (Imperial College). 5. Jewish Women Authors and the Exile Experience: Claire Goll, Veza Canetti, Else Lasker-Schuler, Nelly Sachs, Cordelia Edvardson: Dagmar Lorenz (University of Illinois). 6. The Rohme Episode in Arnold Zweig's Das Beil von Wandsbek: Jost Hermand (University of Wisconsin). 7. The Earliest Reception of the Holocaust: Ernst Sommer's Revolte der Heiligen: Anthony Grenville (London). 8. Kurt Hiller - a "Stankerer" in Exile 1934-1955: J.M. Ritchie (Sheffield). 9. "Uber das Falsche, Schadliche und Kompromittierende des Tagebuch-Schreibens, das ich unter dem Choc des Exils wieder begann und fortfuhrte..." (Thomas Mann, Tagebuch 8. Februar 1942): Inge Jens (Tubingen).

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

ページトップへ