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Books > Language & Literature > Literature: history & criticism > Literary studies
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Fractured Biographies (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,065
Discovery Miles 10 650
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Fractured Biographies (Paperback)
Series: German Monitor, 57
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A physical chemist (Fritz Haber), a photographer (Josef
Breitenbach), a cabaret artist (Georg Kreisler), two writers (Otto
Alscher and Albin Stuebs), a pioneering scholar in Irish-German
studies (John Hennig) and a Celtic philologist (Julius Pokorny) are
the focus of this volume. What they have in common is a biography
fractured by the Nazis' rise to power in 1933. Six were forced into
exile; the life of the seventh, the Romanian-German writer Otto
Alscher, shows that even the biography of a Nazi sympathiser could
be dislocated by the years of dictatorship. As the previously
unpublished letters which are reproduced here show, Fritz Haber, a
Nobel prize winner, spent 'his last lonely months' seeking a
dignified way to leave the country to which he had once felt the
deepest attachment. Although a prominent member of Germany's
academic elite, Julius Pokorny had to retire because of his Jewish
ancestry in December 1935 and yet was allowed to continue
publishing on ethnic themes until his exile in 1943. Albin Stuebs
was forced to seek refuge in Prague and later England when his
left-wing political convictions made him a certain target for the
Nazis. Because of his marriage into a liberal Jewish family, John
Hennig had to renounce all hope of an academic career in Nazi
Germany and, after his exile to Ireland, struggled in straitened
circumstances to support his family while at the same time
developing into an unusually prolific scholar. Proof that exile may
stimulate creative energy is provided by Josef Breitenbach, whose
remarkable biography appears to show that loss and uprootedness may
release otherwise undeveloped creative potential. Similarly, the
flight of Georg Kreisler from Vienna in 1938 was the start of 'a
remarkable voyage of discovery' which saw him grow into a major, if
consistently undervalued figure in the world of post-war German
cabaret.
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