Objects of remembrance : a memoir of American opportunities and Viennese dreams
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Objects of remembrance : a memoir of American opportunities and Viennese dreams
Center for Media and Communication Studies (CMCS), Central European University , Distributed by Central European University Press, 2009
- : cloth
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This is a fascinating autobiography of how to become an American during the 1940-50s. A globally recognized media lawyer and communications scholar, Monroe Price was born to a Jewish family in Vienna in 1938. In 1939, his family immigrated to the US where Monroe grew up. The main focus of the whole book is on the question of identity, that of a child of refugees or a 21st-century scholar and global citizen. In a series of reflections, the reader is offered a personal introduction to everyday life in early 20th-century Austria (including Jewish life, anti-Semitism, the Anschluss, and Kristallnacht-in which the author's father was arrested). Then scenes of American socialization in the Austrian/Jewish diaspora in New York City, Macon (Georgia) and Cincinatti (Ohio) focus on childhood and teenage memories about family, religion, friends, schooling as well as deeply personal issues such as home food or intimacy. Through the particular path of his own life, Price unfolds a more universal story of adjustment, and the relationship between a marginal community and the larger American pull.
Table of Contents
Part I Chapter 1. Refugee, or How Austrian Am I? Chapter 2. Vienna, 1938-1939 Chapter 3. Macon, Georgia Chapter 4. New York City Chapter 5. Cincinnati, Ohio Part II Chapter 6. Work Chapter 7. Food, Clothes, Sex Chapter 8. Objects of Remembrance Chapter 9. Conversing with Austria Acknowledgments and Postscript Index
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