Communazis" FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Emigration Remarque
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1
Communazis: FBI Surveillance of German Emigre Writers
EN
ISBN: 9780300082029 bzw. 0300082029, in Englisch, Yale University Press.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Lagernd.
Communazis: FBI Surveillance of German Emigre Writers Stephan, Alexander / Heurck, Jan / Van Heurck, Jan, Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state.
Communazis: FBI Surveillance of German Emigre Writers Stephan, Alexander / Heurck, Jan / Van Heurck, Jan, Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state.
2
Communazis" FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Emigration Remarque (2000)
EN US
ISBN: 9780300082029 bzw. 0300082029, in Englisch, Yale University Press, gebraucht, mit Einband.
Volksbuchhandlung, [4657684].
Gebraucht -- Sehr gut ACHTUNG! Auflage 2000 - Zustand: sehr gut und sauber - 'Communazis' FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Translation by Jan van Heurck of: 'Im Visier des FBI : deutsche Exilschriftsteller in den Akten amerikanischer Geheimdienste' Inhalt: Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from ***'s Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state. In den vierziger Jahren wurde vom FBI systematisch Material über jene Autoren zusammengetragen, die um 1940 vor den Nazis in die USA und nach Mexiko flüchteten.: Bertolt Brecht, Thomas und Heinrich Mann, Ernst Bloch, Carl Zuckmayer, Lion Feuchtwanger, Anna Seghers und viele andere. Mehr als fünfzig bislang nahezu völlig unbekannte Dossiers mit weit über 10 000 Aktenstücken wurden jetzt vom FBI an den Autor freigegeben. Sie enthalten Protokolle der Post- und Telefonüberwachung, ausführliche Berichte von zahllosen Observierungsaktionen in den Exilzentren New York, Los Angeles und Mexiko City, Aussagen von Informanten und Mitschriften der Verhöre von Betroffenen. Diese Dossiers wurden mit dem Ziel der Verhaftung und Deportierung der betroffenen ***flüchtlinge geführt und werfen ein bezeichnendes Licht auf das Verhältnis von staatlicher Gewalt und Literatur im zwanzigsten Jahrhundert. Halbleinen mit Schutzumschlag.
Gebraucht -- Sehr gut ACHTUNG! Auflage 2000 - Zustand: sehr gut und sauber - 'Communazis' FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Translation by Jan van Heurck of: 'Im Visier des FBI : deutsche Exilschriftsteller in den Akten amerikanischer Geheimdienste' Inhalt: Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from ***'s Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state. In den vierziger Jahren wurde vom FBI systematisch Material über jene Autoren zusammengetragen, die um 1940 vor den Nazis in die USA und nach Mexiko flüchteten.: Bertolt Brecht, Thomas und Heinrich Mann, Ernst Bloch, Carl Zuckmayer, Lion Feuchtwanger, Anna Seghers und viele andere. Mehr als fünfzig bislang nahezu völlig unbekannte Dossiers mit weit über 10 000 Aktenstücken wurden jetzt vom FBI an den Autor freigegeben. Sie enthalten Protokolle der Post- und Telefonüberwachung, ausführliche Berichte von zahllosen Observierungsaktionen in den Exilzentren New York, Los Angeles und Mexiko City, Aussagen von Informanten und Mitschriften der Verhöre von Betroffenen. Diese Dossiers wurden mit dem Ziel der Verhaftung und Deportierung der betroffenen ***flüchtlinge geführt und werfen ein bezeichnendes Licht auf das Verhältnis von staatlicher Gewalt und Literatur im zwanzigsten Jahrhundert. Halbleinen mit Schutzumschlag.
3
Communazis: FBI Surveillance of German EmigröWriters
EN HC US
ISBN: 9780300082029 bzw. 0300082029, in Englisch, Yale University Press, gebundenes Buch, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Versandkostenfrei.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Blue Cloud Books [55521360], Phoenix, AZ, U.S.A.
This book is almost new and shows only very slight signs of wear.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Blue Cloud Books [55521360], Phoenix, AZ, U.S.A.
This book is almost new and shows only very slight signs of wear.
4
Communazis' FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Emigration Remarque (2000)
EN US
ISBN: 9780300082029 bzw. 0300082029, in Englisch, 362 Seiten, Yale University Press, gebraucht, mit Einband.
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandkosten nach: Deutschland.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Volksbuchhandlung, [4657684].
Gebraucht - Sehr gut - - 'Communazis' FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Translation by Jan van Heurck of: 'Im Visier des FBI : deutsche Exilschriftsteller in den Akten amerikanischer Geheimdienste' Inhalt: Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state. In den vierziger Jahren wurde vom FBI systematisch Material über jene Autoren zusammengetragen, die um 1940 vor den Nazis in die USA und nach Mexiko flüchteten.: Bertolt Brecht, Thomas und Heinrich Mann, Ernst Bloch, Carl Zuckmayer, Lion Feuchtwanger, Anna Seghers und viele andere. Mehr als fünfzig bislang nahezu völlig unbekannte Dossiers mit weit über 10 000 Aktenstücken wurden jetzt vom FBI an den Autor freigegeben. Sie enthalten Protokolle der Post- und Telefonüberwachung, ausführliche Berichte von zahllosen Observierungsaktionen in den Exilzentren New York, Los Angeles und Mexiko City, Aussagen von Informanten und Mitschriften der Verhöre von Betroffenen. Diese Dossiers wurden mit dem Ziel der Verhaftung und Deportierung der betroffenen Hitlerflüchtlinge geführt und werfen ein bezeichnendes Licht auf das Verhältnis von staatlicher Gewalt und Literatur im zwanzigsten Jahrhundert. 01.01.2000, Halbleinen mit Schutzumschlag, wie neu, 593g, 362, Internationaler Versand, Selbstabholung und Barzahlung, PayPal, Banküberweisung.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Volksbuchhandlung, [4657684].
Gebraucht - Sehr gut - - 'Communazis' FBI surveillance of German emigre writers. Translation by Jan van Heurck of: 'Im Visier des FBI : deutsche Exilschriftsteller in den Akten amerikanischer Geheimdienste' Inhalt: Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German emigres. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between German anti-Nazis and U.S. politics of the period but also between intellectuals and the modern surveillance state. In den vierziger Jahren wurde vom FBI systematisch Material über jene Autoren zusammengetragen, die um 1940 vor den Nazis in die USA und nach Mexiko flüchteten.: Bertolt Brecht, Thomas und Heinrich Mann, Ernst Bloch, Carl Zuckmayer, Lion Feuchtwanger, Anna Seghers und viele andere. Mehr als fünfzig bislang nahezu völlig unbekannte Dossiers mit weit über 10 000 Aktenstücken wurden jetzt vom FBI an den Autor freigegeben. Sie enthalten Protokolle der Post- und Telefonüberwachung, ausführliche Berichte von zahllosen Observierungsaktionen in den Exilzentren New York, Los Angeles und Mexiko City, Aussagen von Informanten und Mitschriften der Verhöre von Betroffenen. Diese Dossiers wurden mit dem Ziel der Verhaftung und Deportierung der betroffenen Hitlerflüchtlinge geführt und werfen ein bezeichnendes Licht auf das Verhältnis von staatlicher Gewalt und Literatur im zwanzigsten Jahrhundert. 01.01.2000, Halbleinen mit Schutzumschlag, wie neu, 593g, 362, Internationaler Versand, Selbstabholung und Barzahlung, PayPal, Banküberweisung.
5
Communazis: FBI Surveillance of German Emigré Writers
EN US
ISBN: 0300082029 bzw. 9780300082029, in Englisch, Yale University Press, gebraucht.
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Lagernd.
20th century,americas,criticism and theory,education and reference,emigration and immigration,europe,european,germany,history,history and criticism, Communazis : FBI Surveillance of German Emigr? Writers, Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German émigrés. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between Ge.
20th century,americas,criticism and theory,education and reference,emigration and immigration,europe,european,germany,history,history and criticism, Communazis : FBI Surveillance of German Emigr? Writers, Thousands of writers, artists, filmmakers, and intellectuals fled Germany in the 1930s. Many settled in the United States, hoping to find allies against Nazism and a safe refuge from Hitler's Gestapo. But in America nearly all of the exiled authors--among them Nobel Prize recipient Thomas Mann, his brother Heinrich, dramatist Bertolt Brecht, and novelists Erich Remarque and Lion Feuchtwanger--became the subjects of intense suspicion and government surveillance. This riveting book, based on secret FBI files released for the first time to Alexander Stephan under the provisions of the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts, reveals the disturbing details and the surprising extent of government surveillance operations conducted against German exiles during World War II and the McCarthy era. Not only the FBI but also the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the House Un-American Activities Committee, and other agencies spied on the German émigrés. Wiretaps were installed, mail was routinely opened and read, records of visitors were maintained. Searches--not always with legal warrants--were conducted, informants hired, and connections to exile writers established (Thomas Mann's daughter, Erika, volunteered her insights). Stephan sets these activities in historical context and discusses the widespread xenophobia and paranoia that surrounded Nazism and Communism, which were frequently conflated in the public imagination. The author illuminates the relationship not only between Ge.
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