Lexington Books
Pages: 260
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-5023-8 • Hardback • May 2011 • $132.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-5048-1 • eBook • May 2011 • $125.00 • (£96.00)
Axel Fair-Schulzis assistant professor of history at The State University of New York at Potsdam and author of Loyal Subversion: East Germany and its bildungsbürgerlich Marxist Intellectuals.
Mario Kessler is associate professor of contemporary history at University of Potsdam and author of Historia magistra vitae? Über Geschichtswissenschaft und politische Bildung.
1 Preface
2 Werner Jaeger and Robert Ulich: Two Émigré Scholars on Educational Theory
3 Karl Loewenstein: From Public Law to Political Science
4 Hans Rothfels and the Paradoxes of Cosmopolitan Conservatism
5 Woman, Refugee, Historian: The Life and Career of Helene Wieruszowski
6 Between Communism and Anti-Communism: Franz Borkenau
7 Franz L. Neumann's Place in the History of Political Thought: A Sketch
8 Jürgen Kuczynski: A German-Jewish Marxist Scholar in Exile
9 Mentor and Comrade: Henry Pachter
10 Between History and Futurology: Ossip K. Flechtheim
11 Refugee Historians from Nazi Germany: Political Attitudes towards Democracy
12 Acknowledgements
13 List of Contributors
German Scholars in Exile: New Studies in Intellectual History is a diverse collection of intellectual biographies of not-soon-to-be-forgotten scholars. The volume is both a grim testament to the intellectual upheavals resulting from fascist oppression and the violence of war as well as a celebration of the tenacity and determination of those exiled by war to develop innovative and lasting contributions to academia. A fascinating and valuable collection of essays.
— Alexandra E. Hui, Mississippi State University
This collection of essays profiles ten exiled German and Austrian intellectuals who, the editors claim, are “less well-known but not less important figures” (ix) than contemporaries such as Hannah Arendt or Max Horkheimer. The book complements and expands upon the analyses in David Kettler and Gerhard Lauer’s edited volume Exile, Science, and Bildung: The Contested Legacies of German Émigré Intellectuals (New York, 2005). The essays vary in length and depth, ranging from brief sketches to lengthier analyses.
— German Studies Review