Artists in Exile: How Refugees from Twentieth-Century War and Revolution Transformed the American Performing Arts

By Joseph Horowitz.

Artists in Exile: How Refugees from Twentieth-Century War and Revolution Transformed the American Performing Arts

Description

During the first half of the twentieth century—decades of war and revolution in Europe—an "intellectual migration" relocated thousands of artists and thinkers to the United States, including some of Europe's supreme performing artists, filmmakers, playwrights, and choreographers. For them, America proved to be both a strange and opportune destination. A "foreign homeland" (Thomas Mann), it would frustrate and confuse, yet afford a clarity of understanding unencumbered by native habit and bias. However inadvertently, the condition of cultural exile would ...

ISBN(s)

006074846X, 9780060748463

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