British History - Religious Aspects, Jewish History - Europe - General & Miscellaneous, Refugees - Political, Europe - Civilization, Immigration & Emigration - History, Great Britain - General & Miscellaneous History, 20th Century British History - World
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Overview
A fascinating study of European refugees to Britain in the 1930s.This lively book presents an array of colourful portraits of the refugees who escaped Nazism and made a lasting mark on the intellectual and cultural life of Britain. These "Hitler emigrés" helped create the Glyndebourne and Edinburgh festivals, the film The Red Shoes, the magazine Picture Post, the art publishers Phaidon and Thames & Hudson, the Amadeus Quartet, and the architecture of the Penguin Pool at London Zoo. They included artists, architects, musicians, film-makers, historians, philosophers, psychologists, scientists, and broadcasters. Far from eliminating the cosmopolitan culture he abhorred, Hitler was instrumental in spreading it throughout the world.
Book Details
Published
May 2, 2002
Publisher
Chatto & Windus
Pages
320
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780701168803