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German Jews in the United States: a Guide to Archival Collections
GERMAN HISTORICAL INSTITUTE,WASHINGTON,DC REFERENCE GUIDE 24 GERMAN JEWS IN THE UNITED STATES: AGUIDE TO ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS Contents INTRODUCTION &ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 1 ABOUT THE EDITOR 6 ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS (arranged alphabetically by state and then city) ALABAMA Montgomery 1. Alabama Department of Archives and History ................................ 7 ARIZONA Phoenix 2. Arizona Jewish Historical Society ........................................................ 8 ARKANSAS Little Rock 3. Arkansas History Commission and State Archives .......................... 9 CALIFORNIA Berkeley 4. University of California, Berkeley: Bancroft Library, Archives .................................................................................................. 10 5. Judah L. Mages Museum: Western Jewish History Center ........... 14 Beverly Hills 6. Acad. of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: Margaret Herrick Library, Special Coll. ............................................................................ 16 Davis 7. University of California at Davis: Shields Library, Special Collections and Archives ..................................................................... 16 Long Beach 8. California State Library, Long Beach: Special Collections ............. 17 Los Angeles 9. John F. Kennedy Memorial Library: Special Collections ...............18 10. UCLA Film and Television Archive .................................................. 18 11. USC: Doheny Memorial Library, Lion Feuchtwanger Archive ................................................................................................... -
German Jewish Refugees in the United States and Relationships to Germany, 1938-1988
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO “Germany on Their Minds”? German Jewish Refugees in the United States and Relationships to Germany, 1938-1988 A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in History by Anne Clara Schenderlein Committee in charge: Professor Frank Biess, Co-Chair Professor Deborah Hertz, Co-Chair Professor Luis Alvarez Professor Hasia Diner Professor Amelia Glaser Professor Patrick H. Patterson 2014 Copyright Anne Clara Schenderlein, 2014 All rights reserved. The Dissertation of Anne Clara Schenderlein is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically. _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ _____________________________________________________________________ Co-Chair _____________________________________________________________________ Co-Chair University of California, San Diego 2014 iii Dedication To my Mother and the Memory of my Father iv Table of Contents Signature Page ..................................................................................................................iii Dedication ..........................................................................................................................iv Table of Contents ...............................................................................................................v -
The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism
Purdue University Purdue e-Pubs Purdue University Press Books Purdue University Press Fall 12-15-2020 The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism Gideon Reuveni University of Sussex Diana University Franklin University of Sussex Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/purduepress_ebooks Part of the Jewish Studies Commons Recommended Citation Reuveni, Gideon, and Diana Franklin, The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism. (2021). Purdue University Press. (Knowledge Unlatched Open Access Edition.) This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. THE FUTURE OF THE GERMAN-JEWISH PAST THE FUTURE OF THE GERMAN-JEWISH PAST Memory and the Question of Antisemitism Edited by IDEON EUVENI AND G R DIANA FRANKLIN PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESS | WEST LAFAYETTE, INDIANA Copyright 2021 by Purdue University. Printed in the United States of America. Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file at the Library of Congress. Paperback ISBN: 978-1-55753-711-9 An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of librar- ies working with Knowledge Unlatched. KU is a collaborative initiative designed to make high-quality books Open Access for the public good. The Open Access ISBN for this book is 978-1-61249-703-7. Cover artwork: Painting by Arnold Daghani from What a Nice World, vol. 1, 185. The work is held in the University of Sussex Special Collections at The Keep, Arnold Daghani Collection, SxMs113/2/90. -
Integration and Name Changing Among Jewish Refugees from Central Europe in the United States
Reprinted from NAMES VOLUME VI • NUMBER 3 • SEPTEMBER 1958 Integration and Name Changing among Jewish Refugees from Central Europe in the United States ERNEST MAASS Acknowledgements The idea of writing this study came to me a number of years ago. However, it was not until I received a fellowship for this purpose from the Jewish Conference on Material Claims against Germany, Inc., which I gratefully acknowledge, that I was able to give the subject the time and attention I felt it deserved. In furthering the progress of the work several persons were particularly helpful. They gave me freely of their time, encouraged me in various ways, offered welcome critical advice, or commented on the draft manus- cript. Special thanks for such help are due to Abraham Aidenoff, William R. Gaede, Kurt R. Grossmann, Erwin G. Gudde, Hugo Hahn, Ernest Hamburger, Alfred L. Lehmann, Adolf Leschnitzer, Martin Sobotker, Arieh Tartakower and Fred S. Weissman. Among those who throughout the years brought name changes to my attention I am especially indebted to my mother. I also wish to thank the many other persons from whose active interest in the project I have profited and whom I may have failed to mention. Background, Immigration, Integration SE TERM "JEWISH REFUGEE FROM CENTRAL EUROPE", in this paper, refers to Jews from Germany and Austria who left their native lands in 1933 or later as a result of persecution by the Na- tional Socialist regime. It also includes Jews from Czechoslovakia whose mother tongue was German and. who escaped after the annexation by Germany of the Sudetenland in 1938 and the esta- blishment of a German Protectorate in 1939. -
Finding Aid Was Produced Using Archivesspace on June 11, 2021
Spalek, John M.; Papers ger106 This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on June 11, 2021. M.E. Grenander Department of Special Collections & Archives Spalek, John M.; Papers ger106 Table of Contents Summary Information .................................................................................................................................... 3 Administrative History ................................................................................................................................... 3 Scope and Contents ........................................................................................................................................ 4 Arrangement of the Collection ...................................................................................................................... 5 Administrative Information ............................................................................................................................ 5 Controlled Access Headings .......................................................................................................................... 6 Collection Inventory ....................................................................................................................................... 6 Tape Recordings .......................................................................................................................................... 6 Photographs .............................................................................................................................................. -
Germany Minds
SCHENDERLEIN GERMANY ON THEIR MINDS German Jewish Refugees in the United States and Their Relationships with Germany, 1938–1988 GERMANY ANNE C. SCHENDERLEIN ON THEIR is is a solid, comprehensive study of German Jewish refugees in the United States, especially in Los Angeles and New York. It is probing and judicious. Michael A. Meyer, Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion MINDS THEIR ON GERMANY roughout the 1930s and early 1940s, approximately ninety thousand German MINDS Jews ed their homeland and settled in the United States, prior to that nation closing its borders to Jewish refugees. And even though many of them wanted little to do with Germany, the circumstances of World War II and the postwar era meant that engagement of some kind was unavoidable—whether direct or indirect, initiated within the community itself or by political actors and the broader German public. is book carefully traces these entangled histories on GERMAN JEWISH REFUGEES both sides of the Atlantic, demonstrating the remarkable extent to which German Jews and their former fellow citizens helped to shape developments from the IN THE UNITED STATES AND THEIR Allied war e ort to the course of West German democratization. RELATIONSHIPS WITH GERMANY, 19381988 Anne C. Schenderlein is the managing director of the Dahlem Humanities Cen- ter at Freie Universität Berlin. After receiving her doctorate in modern European history at the University of California, San Diego, she was a research fellow at the German Historical Institute from 2015 to 2019. Her research has been sup- ported by numerous fellowships, including the Leo Baeck Fellowship and, more recently, a grant from the American Jewish Archives, where she conducted research on American Jewish boycotts and consumption of German products. -
(Formerly Books Abroad) World Literature
University of Oklahoma Libraries Western History Collections World Literature Today (formerly Books Abroad) World Literature Today Collection. Papers, 1926–1994. 52 feet. Literary journal. Correspondence (1926–1994) between World Literature Today editors and University of Oklahoma administrators and faculty, and with authors and prospective authors, regarding the operation of the journal, its publishing procedures and standards, and works published. Literary correspondents include Sherwood Anderson, John Dos Passos, Upton Sinclair, Thornton Wilder, and H. L. Mencken. Also included in this collection are specialized files (1926– 1951) regarding the flight of authors and playwrights from Nazi Germany and Spain, and their exile in the United States and Mexico; reasons why women have not produced successful plays; and the special writing projects undertaken by prominent authors. ___________________ Box 1 General correspondence to and about Books Abroad from literary figures, 1934-1951. 1-1 Letter from Thomas Mann, 1951, congratulating Books Abroad on its 25th anniversary. 1-2 Correspondence regarding the consequences of the displacement of writers from Germany and Spain, 1942. Authors include John Dos Passos, Burton Rascoe, Gilbert Seldes, Waldo Frank, John Haynes Holmes, Ernst Bloch (in German), Alfred Werner, Hans Marchwitza, Katherine Ann Porter, Ferdinand Bruckner, and Otto Strasser, Joseph Wittlin, and three others. 1-3 Correspondence regarding article entitled "My Debt to Books" in which writers were asked to list their literary influences, 1937-1938. Several of these letters are not in English. Includes letters from: Ventura Garcia Calderon, Dr. Otto Brandt, Dr. Alfred Neumann, Alfred Grunewald, Dr. Karl Hans Strobl, Denys Amiel, Norman Angell, Maurice Dekobra, Paul Hazard, Blaise Cortissoz, Julian Street, Waldo Frank, Mariano Azuela, Dr. -
Unermüdlicher Kämpfer Für Frieden Und Menschenrechte Beiträge Zur Politischen Wissenschaft Band 97
LOTHAR MERTENS Unermüdlicher Kämpfer für Frieden und Menschenrechte Beiträge zur Politischen Wissenschaft Band 97 Foto: Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford KURT R. GROSSMANN Unermüdlicher Kämpfer für Frieden und Menschenrechte Leben und Wirken von Kurt R. Grossmann Von Lothar Mertens Duncker & Humblot · Berlin Die Deutsche Bibliothek - CW-Einheitsaufnahme Mertens, Lothar: Unermüdlicher Kämpfer für Frieden und Menschenrechte: Leben und Wirken von Kurt R. Grossmann I von Lothar Mertens. - Berlin : Duncker und Humblot, 1997 (Beiträge zur politischen Wissenschaft; Bd. 97) Zug!.: Potsdarn, Univ., Diss., 1996 ISBN 3-428-08914-6 AlJe Rechte vorbehalten © 1997 Duncker & Humblot GmbH, Berlin Fotoprint: Color-Druck Dorfi GmbH, Berlin Printed in Germany ISSN 0582-0421 ISBN 3-428-08914-6 Gedruckt auf alterungsbeständigem (säurefreiem) Papier entsprechend ISO 9706 S Vorwort Die vorliegende Darstellung kann aufgrund der nur sehr lückenhaften und mosaikartigen Quellenüberlieferung nur einen skizzenhaften Überblick über Leben und Wirken des Pazifisten Kurt Richard Grossmann (1897-1972) geben. Sie versucht, mit Sympathie fiir den Menschen und mit Respekt vor seiner Le- bensleistung, dessen persönliches Verhalten aber nicht unkritisch betrachtend, seinen Lebens- und Berufsweg in Deutschland, der Tschechoslowakei, Frank- reich und den Vereinigten Staaten von Amerika nachzuzeichnen. Die Biogra- phie will dabei möglichst viele Facetten der Persönlichkeit von Kurt R. Gross- mann erfassen, auch wenn infolge fehlender Archivalien nicht alle Teile so um- fangreich und detailliert präsentiert werden können, wie es wünschenswert ge- wesen wäre. Geschehnisse, die Kurt Grossmann selbst in seinen Publikationen ausfiihrIich beschrieben hat, wie z.B. sein Verhältnis zu earl von Ossietzky, werden in dieser Lebensdarstellung nicht noch einmal wiederholt. Die beiden jeweils zweimonatigen Archivaufenthalte in den USA wurden durch Reise- kostenbeihilfen des German Marshall Fund (Hoover Institution, Stanford) und der Deutschen Forschungsgemeinschaft (Leo Baeck Institute, New York) er- möglicht. -
Chapter 11 JFK, Berlin, and the Berlin Crises, 1961-1963
Chapter 11 JFK, Berlin, and the Berlin Crises, 1961-1963 Robert G. Waite When John Kennedy addressed the nation at his swearing-in ceremony on January 20, 1961, he had nothing to say about Berlin, about the on-going crisis over the status of the occupied and divided city. Rather, the newly elected President spoke on other issues, especially “the quest for peace” and the “struggle against the common enemy of man: tyranny, poverty, disease and war itself.”1 Berlin would soon, however, gain his attention. Tensions in the divided city had been growing since the end of World War II and the Berlin Question became a full-blown international crisis in 1958 when Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev announced that the issue of Berlin had to be settled and that if the West did not agree to a peace treaty recognizing East Germany, the German Democratic Republic, his nation would. Access to Berlin would then fall to Walter Ulbricht and his communist government. Such actions meant that the allies would lose more than their strategic foothold in central Europe; their strength and determination to remain firm against the Communists would be thrown into doubt.2 Despite the absence of references to Berlin in his initial addresses as president, JFK had since his election victory begun to focus on Berlin, on the crises over the status of the divided city which could erupt at any time into a full-blown east-west confrontation. During his term of office as President, Kennedy took forceful and deliberate steps to reassure our European allies, West German leaders, and residents of 1 “Inaugural Address. -
Address Book Stefan Zweig
Stefan Zweig and his last address book 1940-1942. Biographies to the names by Elke Rehder back to Stefan Zweig Stefan Zweig and his last address book 1940-1942. Biography to the names by Elke Rehder For the first time Stefan Zweig's last address book has been published on 1 December 2014 by the Casa Stefan Zweig in Petrópolis in Brazil. The book contains a complete facsimile reprint of Zweig's private "Telephone Book". For the Stefan Zweig-research is this little insignificant address book an authentic source and shows an overview of the people and institutions who where important for Stefan Zweig in his last years in exile. The title of the Brazilian edition is "A rede de amigos de Stefan Zweig: sua última agenda (1940-1942)". The publication of the English edition is: "A Network of Friends: Stefan Zweig, his last address book, 1940-1942" Introduction: Alberto Dines. Organization: Israel Beloch. Research and text by Alberto Dines, the historian Israel Beloch and the Stefan Zweig translator Kristina Michahelles. Graphic Design: Victor Burton. Edited by the Casa Stefan Zweig and published by Memória Brasil The book contains a complete facsimile of Stefan Zweig's last address book which has never been published before. In addition, the book contains numerous short biographies, comments and information about 157 names of individuals and institutions (accidentally double-registered names were not counted). In addition to the introduction of Alberto Dines the book contains a contribution by Klemens Renoldner, Director of the Stefan Zweig Centre at the University of Salzburg. The Brazilian journalist and author Alberto Dines is a globally respected expert in Stefan Zweig-research. -
NEWS LETTER Published by News Research Service, Inc., 727 W
NEWS LETTER Published by News Research Service, Inc., 727 W. Seventh Street, Los Angeles, California Spate permits only highlighting of news. More detailed information is available to serious Students and Writers. Figures In Text indicate Ref-I No.118. December 4,19401 immat erence Notes at end of Issue. ALIBI FRONT OF AMERICA-NAZIS CRACKS Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel. --Samuel Johnson Subversivists of all persuasions, once uncovered, promptly seize upon the Stars and Stripes as their most effective camouflage. This abuse of the flag is resorted to not only by foreign-born Nazi propagandists but also by native- P-erican adherents of Hitler. Almost daily, new cases of both types are ex- 3ed, many of them reaching spectacular proportions. For the present, NEWS LETTER unfolds cases involving Dr. Friedrich E. Au- hagen 1 ), Dr. Edmond F. Kohl and George Sylvester Viereck 2), all German-born. Counterparts of native-born anti-Democratic agitators will be presented in an- early issue, when, among others, the activities of G. Allison Phelps will be analyzed. This is the man who daily, via radio station KMTR, Los Angeles, un- 'eashes a half-hour salvo calculated to arouse racial antagonisms. Using many if Doktor Goebbels' stock arguments, Phelps resorts to the same bag of tricks which underlings of the Reich Propaganda Ministry employ, especially "flag mouflagefl. To this end, Phelps incesTs G F. I! 'TER flEFFFICK. .santly repeats: "I preach Americanise. To deal first with the Nazi brand of anti-Democratic subversivists: NEWS LETTER, on January 4th, last, reproduced a rather chummy letter (il. -
The Compromise of Return: Viennese Jews After the Holocaust
PRAISE FOR THE COMPROMISE OF RETURN “In an engaging, thoroughly researched study, Elizabeth Anthony reveals how and why Jewish returnees came back to ‘their’ city, Vienna, but not to Austria. They persisted in reclaiming their familial, professional, and polit- ical homes, as they compromised with ongoing individual and governmen- tal antisemitism, including the refusal to return their property. Elegantly written, Anthony’s book highlights the hardships and disappointments of Jewish survivors as they settled back ‘home.’” —Marion Kaplan, author of Hitler’s Jewish Refugees: Hope and Anxiety in Portugal “With The Compromise of Return Elizabeth Anthony brings history alive. She paints a vivid picture of the life of Jewish Austrians who chose to remain in or returned to Vienna after the fall of the Nazi regime. Through poignant personal interviews coupled with meticulous archival research and in conversation with international scholarship, the author convinc- ingly argues how their unique Jewish-Viennese identities allowed them to remain in an anti-Semitic society that presented itself as Hitler’s first vic- tim. The Compromise of Return, the first comprehensive English-language study on the topic, constitutes a major contribution to post-war Austrian and Holocaust histories.” —Jacqueline Vansant, author of Reclaiming Heimat: Trauma and Mourning in Memoirs by Jewish Austrian Reémigrés “Deeply researched and beautifully written, this book tells the poignant story of Jewish survivors’ return to Vienna, really for the first time. Brim- ming with insights, it gives voice to the returnees; it is they who stand at the core of this history.” —Dirk Rupnow, Institute for Contemporary History, University of Innsbruck The Compromise of Return THE COMPROMISE OF RETURN VIENNESE JEWS AFTER THE HOLOCAUST ELIZABETH ANTHONY WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS Detroit © 2021 by Elizabeth Anthony.