"Jesenska's essays offer firsthand observations on a society that
was slowly imploding between the years 1920 and 1939 and] will
certainly encourage lively classroom debates (especially in women's
studies, political science and history courses) concerning
politics, the condition of women, and social problems of yesterday
and today." . Slavic and East European Journal
Milena Jesenska, born in Prague in 1896, is most famous as one
of Franz Kafka's great loves. Although their relationship lasted
only a short time, it won the attention of the literary world with
the 1952 publication of Kafka's letters to Milena. Her own letters
did not survive. Later biographies showed her as a fascinating
personality in her own right. In the Czech Republic, she is
remembered as one of the most prominent journalists of the interwar
period and as a brave one: in 1939 she was arrested for her work in
the resistance after the German occupation of Bohemia and Moravia,
and died in Ravensbruck concentration camp in 1944.
It is estimated that Jesenska wrote well over 1,000 articles but
only a handful have been translated into English. In this book her
own writings provide a new perspective on her personality, as well
as the changes in Central Europe between the two world wars as
these were perceived by a woman of letters. The articles in this
volume cover a wide range of topics, including her perceptions of
Kafka, her understanding of social and cultural changes during this
period, the threat of Nazism, and the plight of the Jews in the
1930s.
Kathleen Hayes received her Ph.D from the School of Slavonic and
East European Studies, University of London, and has taught Czech
literature and history at Charles University and New York
University in Prague."
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