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Stefan Heym
The Perpetual Dissident
Stefan Heym was Hitler's youngest literary exile. This is the first full-length study of his work to appear in English.
Peter Hutchinson (Author)
9780521404389, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 9 July 1992
282 pages
21.6 x 14 x 1.9 cm, 0.51 kg
"Hutchinson's representation of Heym is thorough and well argued. The insights into Heym's fictional works receive substantial support from Heym's own biographical details....Peter Hutchinson is to be commended for his thorough research. In addition to the detailed interpretation of Heym's novels and political activities, Hutchinson provides extensive supplemental materials in his notes and a 21-page bibliography....I would recommend this book to any scholar interested in Stefan Heym or writers living under different German regimes, spanning the period from the Weimar Republic to united Germany." Carol Anne Costabile-Heming
Stefan Heym's uncompromising stance made him unpopular with a succession of political regimes. The Nazis, the CIA and the East German secret police all held files on him. He was Hitler's youngest literary exile; McCarthyism was to drive him from the USA; and even in what appeared his natural home - the first socialist state on German soil - he was to become the country's leading dissident. By continuing to compose in both English and German, however, he maintained an international reputation, and has been translated into over twenty languages. This study traces Heym's career principally by reference to his novels, journalism, and political essays, from his earliest works. All his novels are analysed, the major ones in depth, and English translations of all German quotations are provided. Peter Hutchinson focuses particularly on Heym's battles against Stalinism and censorship, and the way in which his courageous defiance of a repressive regime inspired others and paved the way for the 'new' eastern literature of the eighties.
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. The early years: revolt and exile
3. First novels: the Nazi enemy
4. Writing for causes: unpopular political statements
5. Return to Germany: the struggles of the fifties
6. The uses of history: methods of the sixties
7. The uses of literature: Defoe, and the Bible
8. Centre of controversy again: Honecker's first period
9. An easier struggle: the eighties
10. The achievement
Notes
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: Literary studies: from c 1900 - [DSBH]
