Nazis

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Theodora Benson
TB 's prefatory letter has a somewhat heavy air of jokiness: abroad is perfectly grand and kind of large. If there is a riot or a coup d'état at any place I'm staying in I...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Edna St Vincent Millay
This volume is composed mostly of personal love poems (some of them dating back to 1932), in a different strain from the contents of Wine from These Grapes, which Millay had intended as a...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Hannah Arendt
HA arranges her discussion under three headings: anti-Semitism, imperialism, and totalitarianism. Together they compose a bleak picture of current trends: the decline of nation-states and of traditional class alliances, and the rise of anti-Semitism, Nazism
Theme or Topic Treated in Text E. M. Delafield
The pamphlet stresses the importance of beating the Nazis , under whose rule women and children would suffer the most.
McCullen, Maurice. E. M. Delafield. Twayne.
90
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Hannah Arendt
Arendt puts forward several points which many readers found controversial or even unacceptable. As her sub-title makes clear, she does not present Eichmann as a monster, an exception, or a freakishly wicked specimen of the...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Nancy Mitford
NM is less concerned to depict the evil than the stupidity inherent in fascism and nazism : I don't quite know what an Aryan is.Well, it's quite easy. A non-Aryan is the missing link...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Phyllis Bottome
This book, set in 1938 in Austria, condemns both NaziGermany and aggressive, self-destructive aspects of Austrian and German culture.
Lassner, Phyllis. British Women Writiers of World War II: Battlegrounds of Their Own. St Martin’s Press.
230
The novel developed out of PB 's experiences at Kitzbühel in Germany...
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Phyllis Bottome
Like another open letter by PB , I Accuse (not published until the end of this year), this one is highly critical of Anschluss (the Nazi takeover of Austria), for which she holds Britain partly responsible.
Lassner, Phyllis. British Women Writiers of World War II: Battlegrounds of Their Own. St Martin’s Press.
217
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Rosita Forbes
Her alarm about the scope for Nazi propaganda (through agents including prostitutes) among the recently rich, now impoverished, South Americans is fuelled by attitudes which are today seen as racist: to the prevalent combination of...
Travel Mary Agnes Hamilton
Like Germany and North America, Austria became a regular destination and she made a number of ongoing friendships there. She visited in 1928, 1934 (when the shadow of Nazism was already perceptible), 1936, and in...
Travel Mary Agnes Hamilton
This was a step towards remedying what she terms her long neglect of France. She was back there again several times in 1939.
Hamilton, Mary Agnes. Remembering My Good Friends. Jonathan Cape.
193-4, 208, 210
In general she was more strongly drawn by Germany...
Travel Anne Ridler
Her memoir details her family holidays: six weeks in lodgings in summer and two at Easter, visiting Cornwall, St Davids in Wales, the Lake District, and France (the first time, to Brittany...
Travel Barbara Pym
After visiting NaziGermany with the National Union of Students in March 1934, BP travelled with the same organization the following year to Budapest.
Allen, Orphia Jane. Barbara Pym: Writing a Life. Scarecrow Press.
8-9
Wyatt-Brown, Anne M. Barbara Pym: A Critical Biography. University of Missouri Press.
32-3
Travel Vera Brittain
VB 's political commitments involved a great deal of travel, beginning with journeys all around England as a League of Nations Union lecturer. She was in Cologne in October 1924 observing the hungry, hopeless Germans...
Violence Sylvia Beach
SB was forced to close Shakespeare and Company , her Paris bookshop, following threats of seizure by the Nazis .
Fitch, Noel Riley. Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation: A History of Literary Paris in the Twenties and Thirties. W. W. Norton.
404-5

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