Hans Keller and Internment
The Development of an Emigre Musician
Alison Garnham author Christopher Wintle author Christopher Wintle editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Plumbago Books and Arts
Published:17th Nov '11
Should be back in stock very soon
The story of influential music critic, Hans Keller's months in British internment camps in 1940 and its effect on his intellectual development. After World War II, the musical life of Britain was transformed by the Hitler emigrés. None was more influential than the writer and broadcaster Hans Keller who arrived in London from Vienna in 1938. Although his thought was grounded in the work of Kant and Freud, he devoted himself to music after hearing Benjamin Britten's Peter Grimes. His remarkable development was accelerated during the nine months he spent in British internment camps, where from 1940 onwards the deracinated flower of European culture was confined . This book sets the story of Keller's internment in the context of what is still a too-little remembered part of British wartime history and traces its remarkable effects in the decade following his release as he gradually found his niche in London life. It includes several important texts, including that of his famous broadcast on the Kristallnacht, 'Vienna 1938', a selection of poignant letters from his two camps (in translation) and ends with a spirited memoir by Donald Mitchell of 'Hans Keller in the Early Years'. It is a remarkable and elegant contribution to our understanding both of Keller's development and of Britain in the 1940s.
It is [...] fascinating to trace the emergence of the kind of 'Kellerism' that became such a strong feature of his journalism and scholarship from the letters [...] which he wrote as an internee. * MUSICAL TIMES *
[P]resents a detailed and considered account of life for a musical emigré in the uncertain early days of the war. * JOURNAL OF THE SOCIETY FOR MUSICOLOGY IN IRELAND *
ISBN: 9780955608780
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 1g
224 pages