The German Friend War and Postwar Letters from German Anti-Nazi Prinz Hubertus Zu löwenstein to American Hans Christian, 1942-1947 |
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Author:
| Larson, John |
ISBN: | 978-1-5027-9167-2 |
Publication Date: | Oct 2014 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $24.95 |
Book Description:
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In 1942 John W. Larson was a student at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, when he befriended a visiting lecturer from Germany, Prince Hubertus L#65533;wenstein, a prominent scholar whose anti-Nazi views forced him into exile after Hitler came to power.
Larson and L#65533;wenstein began a correspondence that lasted throughout World War II and into the postwar era. In his letters, L#65533;wenstein shares his thoughts on Nazism, German democracy, the Weimar Republic,...
More Description
In 1942 John W. Larson was a student at Hamline University in St. Paul, Minnesota, when he befriended a visiting lecturer from Germany, Prince Hubertus L#65533;wenstein, a prominent scholar whose anti-Nazi views forced him into exile after Hitler came to power.
Larson and L#65533;wenstein began a correspondence that lasted throughout World War II and into the postwar era. In his letters, L#65533;wenstein shares his thoughts on Nazism, German democracy, the Weimar Republic, life in exile, and his impressions of major events during the war. In 1946 L#65533;wenstein returned to Germany, and his letters to Larson document the widespread starvation, unemployment, and destruction that he found there.
In The German Friend, Larson compiles more than four hundred of L#65533;wenstein's letters. Unlike his careful academic papers, the scholar's personal opinions shine through in his correspondence, and he shares views that, as a scholar, he would rarely express in his public writing.
Accompanied by Larson's editorial introductions and explanations of L#65533;wenstein's developing thoughts, A German Friend is a unique and invaluable resource for scholars, students, and enthusiasts of World War II, as well as a revealing glimpse into the mind of one of Germany's more influential twentieth-century thinkers.