Double Exile: Migrations of Jewish-Hungarian Professionals Through Germany to the United States, 1919-1945

Portada
Peter Lang, 2009 - 501 pŕgines
This is a social history of refugees escaping Hungary after the Bolshevik-type revolution of 1919, the ensuing counterrevolution, and the rise of anti-Semitism. Largely Jewish and German before World War I, the Hungarian middle class was torn by the disastrous war, the partitioning of Hungary in the Treaty of Trianon, and the numerus clausus act XXV in 1920 that seriously curtailed the number of Jews admitted to higher education. Hungary's outstanding future professionals, whether Jewish, Liberal or Socialist, felt compelled to leave the country and head to German-speaking universities in Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Germany. When Hitler came to power, these exiles were to flee again, many on the fringes of the huge German emigration. Emotionally prepared by their earlier threatening experiences in Hungary, they were quick to recognize the need to uproot themselves again. Many fled to the United States where their double exile catalyzed the USA into an active enemy of Nazi Germany and stimulated the transplantation of European modernism into American art and music. To their surprise, the refugees also encountered anti-Semitism in the USA. The book is based on extensive archival work in the USA and Germany.
 

Continguts

List of Illustrations
9
The Social Construction of Hungarian Genius
21
List of Illustrations
22
The Chemistry of FindeSičcle Budapest
33
Budapest 1930s a HNM
35
Schooling
55
Mintagimnázium Model High School
61
Nobel Laureate Eugene Wigner in his Princeton
67
Demonstration against the Horthy Regime
229
Double Expulsion Double Trauma
243
The Copernican Turn of Michael Polanyi
264
American Patterns
270
Institutional
278
167
294
204
309
Problem Solving and the U S War Effort
351

The Hungarian Trauma 19181920
85
The Escape of Hungarian Modernism
104
Graduating Jewish Students of the Lutheran
120
Berlin Junction
121
Berlin Unter den Linden 1920s HNM
128
From Budapest to Berlin
131
Paul Abraham composer 1950s HNM
139
The Amerikanisierung of Berlin
142
The Babel of the World
148
Other Options in Europe
159
Hungary and Selective Immigration to the U
167
City of Immigrants
204
New York 1933 Photo John Albók
206
Theodore von Kármán aerospace scientist
368
John von Neumann
382
ཊྛ ིིྲཝཱ ཝཱ ཝཉྫ
393
John von Neumann mathematician
400
The Manhattan Project and Leo Szilard
401
Edward Teller visiting the Lutheran Gimnázium 1991
413
Conclusion
431
Appendix
437
Emil Lengyel Americas Role in World Affairs
446
Bibliography
455
Index
485
129
489
Copyright

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