First Letters After Exile by Thomas Mann, Hannah Arendt, Ernst Bloch, and Others.
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Medientyp | Aktuelle Bibliothek | Signatur | Status | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
E-Books | MWN Osteuropa Online-Ressource | E-21-e00447 (Regal durchstöbern(Öffnet sich unterhalb)) | Verfügbar | 56333 |
Cover -- Front Matter -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1-12 -- Chapter 1 The "First Letters" Exile Project: Introduction -- Chapter 2 "That I Will Return, My Friend, You Do Not Believe Yourself" -- About Karl Wolfskehl -- 1. Friedrich von der Leyen to Karl Wolfskehl, 26.5.46 -- 2. Kurt Frener to Karl Wolfskehl, 30.3.46 (Receipt 12.9.46) -- 3. Karl Wolfskehl to Gustav Richard Heyer, 14.10.4626 -- Reply -- 4. Gertrud Countess Helmstatt to Karl Wolfskehl, 29.8.46 -- Reply -- 5. Marie Buchhold to Karl Wolfskehl, 17.10.46 -- Reply -- 6. Emil Preetorius to Karl Wolfskehl, 28.12.46 (1883) -- Reply -- Conclusion -- Letters -- Archives -- Chapter 3 "I Do Not Lift A Stone" -- I. On the Special Position of Thomas Mann's First Letter-The History of Its Origin -- II. On the Political Position of Walter von Molo-His Two First Letters to Thomas Mann -- III. Thomas Mann's Reply to Walter von Molo-Well Balanced and Misguided -- IV. Three Men Behind the Scenes-On the Aftereffects of Thomas Mann's First Letter -- Chapter 4 Faust Narrative And Impossibility Thesis -- 1. Public Clarification -- 2. The Impossibility Thesis -- 3. The Faust Narrative as Basis of the Impossibility Thesis -- 4. State and Nation -- Chapter 5 "That I Am Not Allowed For A Moment To Forget The Ocean Of Blood" -- Introduction -- 2. Hans-Georg Gadamer and Leo Strauss -- 3. Hans-Georg Gadamer and Leo Strauss until 1936 -- 4. Hans-Georg Gadamer and Leo Strauss in Their "First Letters" -- Chapter 6 Return Into Exile -- I -- II -- III -- IV -- V -- VI -- VII -- VIII -- Chapter 7 A Postwar Encounter Without Pathos -- The Poles of Continuity from Pre- to Postwar -- Summing Up -- Chapter 8 An Exile's Letter To Old Comrades In Cologne.
In Exile: "Die Sozialdemokratie ist mein tiefstes Erlebnis geblieben" (The Social Democracy Has Remained My Most Profound Experience) -- Communication across the Long Distance of Emigration after the War -- "To Overcome the German Inclination to Make a Religion Out of Party Affiliation" -- Sollmann's Arrival in America and the Allegation of Anti-Semitism -- The Debate over Reassessing the Marxist Legacy of German Social Democracy -- "I Feel My Part of the German Guilt" -- Conclusion -- Chapter 9 First Letters -- 1. A Letter from Wiesbaden -- 2. Confirmation of a Life -- 3. A Conversation between Spirits? -- 4. German, Jewish, Foreign Women, or Maiden -- 5. Heidegger and Marcuse -- 6. Once Again, Germans, Jews … -- 7. The Maiden from Strange Parts -- 8. The End of a Letter -- 9. Reflections on Forgiving -- Chapter 10 Denazification And Postwar German Philosophy -- Chapter 11 "It Would Be Perhaps A New Exile And Perhaps The Most Painful" -- Chapter 12 Social Constellation Of The Exile At The End Of The Second World War And The Pragmatics Of The "First Letters" -- I. Preliminary Remark -- II. The Social Constellation Underlying the Resumption of Old, Preexilic Connections -- 1. The Objective Meaning Structure of Exilic Emigration -- 2. The Macrosocial Condition of Exile -- 3. On the Microsocial Constellation of the First Letters -- III. On the Pragmatics of the First Letters -- IV. On the Material Analyses -- 1. The Case of Trenker/Kohner14 -- a. The Social Constellation -- b. The Pragmatics of the Correspondence -- c. The Sequence Analysis in Segments -- 2. The First Letter from Helene Wieruszowski to Friedrich Meinecke -- a. The Social Constellation -- b. The Pragmatics of Letter Communication.
c. Sequence Analysis of the First Letter from Helene Wieruszowski to Friedrich Meinecke in Excerpts-Letter of August 11, 1946, from Brooklyn, New York -- 3. The Open Letter of September 1946 from Robert Rie to the Austrian Federal Chancellor -- a. The Social Constellation Underlying This Open Letter -- b. Pragmatics of the Open Letter -- c. Sequential Analysis of the Open Letter in Excerpts -- V. Final Review -- End Matter -- Notes On Contributors -- Index.
The book contains a number of studies focused on the post-war correspondence between noted exiles from Hitler's Germany and colleagues and friends who remained in Germany. These materials provide unique insights into the reshaping of relations among the correspondents, which figure decisively in decisions of exiles on questions of return.
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