Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933
Lixl-Purcell . . . has chosen twenty-six from the hundreds of unpublished memoirs he researched. They are arranged in three sections—Persecution and Displacement, Exile and War, and Exile in Hindsight. Much of the power of their stories lies in their matter-of-fact and straightforward telling of their fears, narrow escapes, sorrows, and triumphs. There are narratives describing women's social, cultural and political networks before and after immigration, the isoilated struggles of individuals, their work as legal or illegal aliens abroad, and their involvement with underground resistance movements. American Library Book Review

Women's exile autobiographies, written usually for an audience of relatives and fellow travellers, are rarely made available to the public. This is particularly true for Jewish women who fled Germany after Hitler's rise to power in 1933. In this unusual volume, the memoirs, diaries, and letters of twenty-six of these extraordinary women are published together for the first time. Their recollections paint a provocative profile of exile life and cover a broad spectrum of emigre history on every continent. While each memoir voices an intensely personal explanation, their combined effect is to launch a radical reinterpretation of women's roles, fates, and destinies.

"1144219130"
Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933
Lixl-Purcell . . . has chosen twenty-six from the hundreds of unpublished memoirs he researched. They are arranged in three sections—Persecution and Displacement, Exile and War, and Exile in Hindsight. Much of the power of their stories lies in their matter-of-fact and straightforward telling of their fears, narrow escapes, sorrows, and triumphs. There are narratives describing women's social, cultural and political networks before and after immigration, the isoilated struggles of individuals, their work as legal or illegal aliens abroad, and their involvement with underground resistance movements. American Library Book Review

Women's exile autobiographies, written usually for an audience of relatives and fellow travellers, are rarely made available to the public. This is particularly true for Jewish women who fled Germany after Hitler's rise to power in 1933. In this unusual volume, the memoirs, diaries, and letters of twenty-six of these extraordinary women are published together for the first time. Their recollections paint a provocative profile of exile life and cover a broad spectrum of emigre history on every continent. While each memoir voices an intensely personal explanation, their combined effect is to launch a radical reinterpretation of women's roles, fates, and destinies.

95.0 In Stock
Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933

Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933

by Andreas Lixl Purcell
Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933

Women of Exile: German-Jewish Autobiographies Since 1933

by Andreas Lixl Purcell

Hardcover

$95.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Lixl-Purcell . . . has chosen twenty-six from the hundreds of unpublished memoirs he researched. They are arranged in three sections—Persecution and Displacement, Exile and War, and Exile in Hindsight. Much of the power of their stories lies in their matter-of-fact and straightforward telling of their fears, narrow escapes, sorrows, and triumphs. There are narratives describing women's social, cultural and political networks before and after immigration, the isoilated struggles of individuals, their work as legal or illegal aliens abroad, and their involvement with underground resistance movements. American Library Book Review

Women's exile autobiographies, written usually for an audience of relatives and fellow travellers, are rarely made available to the public. This is particularly true for Jewish women who fled Germany after Hitler's rise to power in 1933. In this unusual volume, the memoirs, diaries, and letters of twenty-six of these extraordinary women are published together for the first time. Their recollections paint a provocative profile of exile life and cover a broad spectrum of emigre history on every continent. While each memoir voices an intensely personal explanation, their combined effect is to launch a radical reinterpretation of women's roles, fates, and destinies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313259210
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 06/24/1988
Series: Contributions in Women's Studies , #91
Pages: 241
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.62(d)

About the Author

ANDREAS LIXL-PURCELL is Assistant Professor of German at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where he teaches modern literature and culture.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Women of Exile: Isolation as Identity
Persecution and Displacement
Ruth Sass-Glaser, Growing Up in Germany
Margot Bloch-Wresinski, Immigration to Palestine
Bertha Katz, My World Fell to Pieces
Erika Bond, Among the First Refugees
Toni Sender, Escape From Terror
Anonymous, There Was No Going Back
Thekla Kauffman, German-Jewish Children's Aid
Nora Rosenthal, Disillusionment
Hertha Beuthner, On the Train to Moscow
Marta Feuchtwanger, Transit
Alice Oppenheimer, A Few Days of My Life
Annemarie Wolfram, At the Border
Exile and War
Elizabeth Bamberger, Emigration or Deportation
Esti Freud, Beyond My Understanding
Ellen Schoenheimer, Refugee Life in France
Charlotte Singer, From the Diary of a Refugee
Grete Fischer, "Club 1943"
Paul Littauer, Berlin and Brussels 1942-1944
Ellen Drobatschewski, In Hiding
Kate Mendels, Exile in Australia
Lucie Begov, With My Own Eyes
Exile in Hindsight
Johanna Neumann, End of the War
Else Gerstel, Times Have Changed
Ruth Michaelis-Jena, Post-War Germany
Hilde Domin, Among Acrobats and Birds
Charlotte Stein-Pick, Afterword
Selected Bibliography
Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews