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Ruth Borchardt's Interned: An Enemy Alien in Holloway Prison,
reproduced here with an introduction by Charmian Brinson, was
written but not completed in 1943, and only came to light after the
author's recent death. The novel vividly describes the plight of a
young German refugee, Anna Silver, as an 'enemy alien' in Britain
on the outbreak of war, and her subsequent detention in Holloway
Prison, a situation made more complex by her young child. The novel
finishes as Anna Silver arrives at the Internment Camp on the Isle
of Man. The second part of the novel, dealing with events on the
Isle of Man, was planned but appears never to have been written.
This book highlights the plight of German anti-Nazis and Jews in
British exile and has a distinct air of tragicomedy about it.
Little has been written on the internment of women during the
Second World War, and this book will appeal to readers interested
in modern history, social history, and women's studies.
In May and June 1940, when the war seemed to be going badly for
Britain, thousands of German and Austrian refugees from Nazi
oppression were rounded up and put into internment camps on the
Isle of Man and elsewhere. Fred Uhlman, a Jewish refugee from
Stuttgart, a lawyer and an artist, was one of them. Uhlman, who was
deeply affected by the experience, set out to record it in word and
image. This volume reproduces his original internment diary from
1940 alongside another version of the same text from 1979, compiled
retrospectively. These texts are complemented by sixteen haunting
drawings and linocuts that Uhlman produced during internment. The
volume also contains the letters, highly moving personal documents,
exchanged to and from the internment camp between Uhlman and his
wife Diana; correspondence between Uhlman and his disapproving
aristocratic father-in-law Lord Croft; and documents from the daily
life of Hutchinson Camp, Douglas, Isle of Man, where Uhlman was
held for seven months. Chapters on Uhlman's biography and on his
artistic and literary output set his writings and drawings within
the wider context of his life and work. In addition, a chapter
outlining the internment crisis of 1940 also sets out to recreate
the extraordinary cultural and intellectual life that the internees
managed to make for themselves in Hutchinson Camp, in particular
the activities of the sizeable group of artists, such as Kurt
Schwitters, who happened to find themselves there.
This is an unusual book, telling a story which has hitherto
remained hidden from history: the surveillance by the British
security service MI5 of anti-Nazi refugees who came to Britain
fleeing political persecution in Germany and Austria. Based on the
personal and organisational files that MI5 kept on political
refugees during the 1930s and 1940s - which have only recently been
released into the public domain - this study also fills a
considerable gap in historical research. Telling a story of
absorbing interest, which at times reads more like spy fiction, it
is both a study of MI5 and of the political refugees themselves.
The book will interest academics in the fields of history,
politics, intelligence studies, Jewish studies, German studies and
migration studies; but it is also accessible to the general reader
interested in Britain before, during and after the Second World
War. -- .
This is an unusual book, telling a story which has hitherto
remained hidden from history: the surveillance by the British
security service MI5 of anti-Nazi refugees who came to Britain
fleeing political persecution in Germany and Austria. Based on the
personal and organisational files that MI5 kept on political
refugees during the 1930s and 1940s - which have only recently been
released into the public domain - this study also fills a
considerable gap in historical research. Telling a story of
absorbing interest, which at times reads more like spy fiction, it
is both a study of MI5 and of the political refugees themselves.
The book will interest academics in the fields of history,
politics, intelligence studies, Jewish studies, German studies and
migration studies; but it is also accessible to the general reader
interested in Britain before, during and after the Second World
War. -- .
New essays on the influence of politics on 20c. German culture, not
only during the Nazi and Cold War eras but in periods when the
effects are less obvious. The cultural history of 20th-century
Germany, more perhaps than that of any other European country, was
decisively influenced by political forces and developments. This
volume of essays focuses on the relationship between German
politics and culture, which is most obvious in the case of the
Third Reich and the German Democratic Republic, where the one-party
control of all areas of life was extended to the arts; these were
expected to conform to the idealsof the day. But the relationship
between politics and the arts has not always been one purely of
coercion, censorship, collusion, and opportunism. Many writers
greeted the First World War with quite voluntary enthusiasm; others
conjured up the National Socialist revolution in intense
Expressionist images long before 1933. The GDR was heralded by
writers returning from Nazi exile as the anti-fascist answer to the
Third Reich. And in West Germany, politicsdid not dictate artistic
norms, nor was it greeted with any great enthusiasm among
intellectuals, but writers did tend to ally themselves with
particular parties. To an extent, the pre-1990 literary
establishment in the Federal Republic was dominated by a
left-liberal consensus that German division was the just punishment
for Auschwitz. United Germany began its existence with a fierce
literary debate in 1990-92, with leading literary critics arguing
that East and West German literature had basically shored up the
political order in the two countries. Now a new literature was
required, one that was free of ideology, intensely subjective and
experimental in its aesthetic. In 1998, the author Martin Walser
called for an end to the author's role as "conscience of the
nation" and for the right to subjective experience. This is the
first book to examine this crucial relationship between politics
and culture in Germany. William Niven and James Jordan are readers
in German at the University of Nottingham Trent.
Berthold Jacob war einer der bekanntesten deutschen Journalisten
und Pazifisten der Weimarer Republik, der als Anti-Nazi und Jude
schon 1932 Zuflucht in Strassburg fand. Im Marz 1935 wurde er durch
die Gestapo uber die schweizerisch-deutsche Grenze entfuhrt und in
Berlin verhaftet, was internationales Aufsehen erregte. Mit einer
grundlichen Einfuhrung versehen, enthalt der vorliegende Band
bisher unbekannte und unveroeffentlichte Briefe und andere
Dokumente, die eine detaillierte Chronik der Bemuhungen der Freunde
im Exil entwerfen, Jacob aus seiner Berliner Haft zu befreien.
Zugleich wirft das Buch ein neues Licht auf die schwierigen,
nervenaufreibenden Lebensumstande antinazistischer Exilanten in den
Emigrationslandern Europas.
The exodus of men, women and children fleeing from the Nazi regime
was one of the largest diasporas the world has ever seen. It
sparked an international refugee crisis that changed society and
continues to shape our culture and community today. The years
between 1933 and 1945, the Nazi era in Germany, and the war years,
1939 to 1945, were a time of destruction, upheaval and misery
throughout Europe and beyond. Displacement and death, whether in
war or civilian life, became everyday experiences, for young and
old alike. Families were torn apart by enforced emigration or
deportation. Parents were separated from their children, husbands
from wives, brothers from sisters. Interned in camps that spread
across the globe from Shanghai to the United States of America to
the Isle of Man, they became strangers in a foreign land and often
the only link they had to their former lives were letters exchanged
with friends and family. These scarce postal communications,
therefore, assumed huge significance in the lives of both sender
and receiver, one that is hard to imagine today in the age of
instant communication. Fleeing from the Fuhrer is an unusual
collection of correspondence that shows the incredible nature of
this worldwide emigration and the indomitable spirit of these
refugees. Each postcard, envelope and item of ephemera tells its
own unique story and is reproduced in full colour, making this a
fascinating resource for anyone wanting to understand this poignant
part of our international history.
The Austrian Centre was established in London in 1939 by Austrians
seeking refuge from Nazi Germany, of whom 30,000 had reached
Britain by the outbreak of World War II. It soon developed into a
comprehensive social, cultural and political organisation with a
theatre and a weekly newspaper of its own. A Communist-influenced
organisation, it also followed a distinct political agenda. In the
first book on the cultural and political life of Austrian refugees
in Britain, Out of Austria assesses and evaluates the Austrian
Centre's activities and achievements, while also examining the
Austrians' often fraught relations with their British hosts. It
gives a fascinating insight into such figures as Sigmund Freud, who
became the Centre's Honorary President during his final months and
the poet Erich Fried, then an unknown seventeen-year-old, and sheds
light on the interaction of politics and culture against the
background of exile in wartime Britain.
The Austrian Centre was established in London in 1939 by Austrians
seeking refuge from Nazi Germany, of whom 30,000 had reached
Britain by the outbreak of World War II. It soon developed into a
comprehensive social, cultural and political organisation with a
theatre and a weekly newspaper of its own. A Communist-influenced
organisation, it also followed a distinct political agenda. In the
first book on the cultural and political life of Austrian refugees
in Britain, "Out of Austria" assesses and evaluates the Austrian
Centre's activities and achievements, while also examining the
Austrians' often fraught relations with their British hosts. It
gives a fascinating insight into such figures as Sigmund Freud, who
became the Centre's Honorary President during his final months and
the poet Erich Fried, then an unknown seventeen-year-old, k and
sheds light on the interaction of politics and culture against the
background of exile in wartime Britain.
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