First Letters After Exile by Thomas Mann, Hannah Arendt, Ernst Bloch, and Others
By (Author) David Kettler
Edited by Detlef Garz
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
10th March 2021
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
European history
Politics and government
943.0870922
Hardback
248
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
In the study of the National Socialist State and its aftermath, two unusual aspects continue to occupy historians and social science commentators. First, a factor important enough to enter into the very definition of totalitarianism is the thoroughgoing mobilization, coercive if needed, of the population of writers, teachers, professors journalists and other intellectual workers, securing cooperation or at the least passive concurrence in the mass-inculcation of the population in the destructive Fascist ideology. Second is the central place of dissident members of these populations in the exile. Since webs of communications with others, the majority of whom had remained in Germany, had constituted their own memberships in the populations at issue, the question of their roles in the post-war era depended importantly on the ways and means by which they restored or refused to restore communications with those who had remained.
David Kettler is a student of social and political theory with a special interest in the intellectual generation at work in Germany between the wars and in exile. He is Professor Emeritus of both Trent University (Canada) and Bard College (USA).
Detlef Garz is interested in social and educational theory and qualitative research with a focus on biographical development in Nazi Germany and beyond.