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Elizabeth Wiskemann - Scholar, Journalist, Secret Agent (Hardcover)
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Elizabeth Wiskemann - Scholar, Journalist, Secret Agent (Hardcover)
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This biography examines the life and career of scholar-journalist
Elizabeth Wiskemann (1899-1971) from her youth and student years at
Cambridge to her death by suicide. Disappointed in her hopes for an
academic career, she reinvented herself as a journalist in Berlin,
covering the overthrow of the Weimar Republic and the rise of
Nazism for The New Statesman, Nation, and numerous other newspapers
and periodicals. Expelled from Germany, she settled in Prague and
funded by Chatham House wrote the most important account of the
Czech-German conflict and the Sudeten crisis, still a classic,
followed by a detailed analysis of Nazi political and economic
destabilization of the countries of eastern Europe. Her
journalistic skills served her well in the war years when she
worked as a secret agent in Switzerland, gathering intelligence,
running agents into Axis-controlled Europe, and working closely
with Allen Dulles, the O.S.S. chief in Bern. Postwar, Wiskemann
returned to freelance journalism, focusing especially on Italy and
Germany, while also writing several books, including the first
scholarly study of the Hitler-Mussolini relationship and the first
major account of the expulsion of 12 million ethnic Germans from
Eastern Europe. Although a prolific writer and highly regarded as a
commentator on international affairs, she remained on the fringes
of academia until 1958 when she was appointed Professor of
International Relations at Edinburgh (the first woman to receive a
Chair there in any discipline); she later became one of the first
faculty recruited by the new Sussex University. In her later years
she published several works of contemporary history, including
Europe of the Dictators, 1919-45, widely used in schools and
universities. Blinded in one eye by a botched surgery and
increasingly anxious as her other eye deteriorated, she became
terrified of going completely blind and ended her life. Aside from
its intrinsic interest, Wiskemann's biography is illustrative of a
whole cohort of women - graduates in the 1920s and 30s - who found
ways to pursue their interests in international affairs and
contemporary history. In this sense the book foregrounds the
gendered experience of these pioneers whose professional lives
often intersected through journalism, Chatham House, and service in
the propaganda and intelligence agencies of the wartime state.
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