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Egon Kisch

Egon Erwin Kisch (29 April 1885 – 31 March 1948) was an Austrian and Czechoslovak writer and journalist, who wrote in German. He styled himself Der Rasende Reporter (The Racing Reporter) for his countless travels to the far corners of the globe and his equally numerous articles produced in a relatively short time (Hetzjagd durch die Zeit, 1925), Kisch was noted for his development of literary reportage, his opposition to Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime, and his Communism.

Egon Kisch
Born(1885-04-29)April 29, 1885
DiedMarch 31, 1948(1948-03-31) (aged 62)
Resting placeVinohrady Cemetery, Prague
Political partyCommunist Party of Austria
Military service
AllegianceAustria-Hungary
Branch/serviceAustro-Hungarian Navy
Austro-Hungarian Army
Years of service1914-1918
Unit11th Infantry Regiment
Battles/wars
Egon Kisch in Melbourne in 1934

Biography edit

Kisch was born into a wealthy, German-speaking Sephardi Jewish family in Prague, at that time part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and began his journalistic career as a reporter for Bohemia, a Prague German-language newspaper, in 1906. In 1910, Bohemia began publishing a weekly column of Kisch's essays. “Prague Forays” ran for more than a year and, along with several books containing reprinted and original material, made Kisch a local celebrity. These feuilletons, which consisted of he called "little novels" about the city, were characterised by an interest in prisons, work houses, and the lives of the poor of Prague. His style was inspired by Jan Neruda, Émile Zola and Charles Dickens's Sketches by Boz. Before World War I, he uncovered the spy scandal involving Alfred Redl, which he published anonymously at the time.[1]

At the outbreak of World War I, Kisch was called up for military service and became a corporal in the Austrian army. He fought on the front line in Serbia and the Carpathians and his wartime experiences were later recorded in Schreib das auf, Kisch! (Write That Down, Kisch!) (1929). He was briefly imprisoned in 1916 for publishing reports from the front that criticised the Austrian military's conduct of the war, but nonetheless later served in the army's press quarters along with fellow writers Franz Werfel and Robert Musil.

Communist edit

The war radicalised Kisch. He deserted in October 1918 as the war came to an end and played a leading role in the abortive left-wing revolution in Vienna in November of that year. Werfel's novel Barbara oder die Frömmigkeit (1929) portrays the events of this period and Kisch was the inspiration for one of the novel's characters. Although the revolution failed, in 1919, Kisch became a member of the Austrian Communist Party and remained a Communist for the rest of his life.[2]

Between 1921 and 1930 Kisch, though a citizen of Czechoslovakia, lived primarily in Berlin, where his work found a new and appreciative audience. In books of collected journalism such as Der rasende Reporter (The Whirling Reporter) (1924), he cultivated the image of a witty, gritty, daring reporter always on the move, a cigarette clamped doggedly between his lips. His work and his public persona found an echo in the artistic movement of Neue Sachlichkeit, a major strand in the culture of the Weimar Republic.

 
Willi Münzenberg set up a multitude of Communist Front organizations sending Egon Kisch to promote Comintern propaganda throughout the world

From 1925 onwards Kisch was a speaker and operative of the communist international and a senior figure in the publishing empire of the West European branch of the Comintern run by communist propagandist Willi Münzenberg. In 1928 Kisch was one of the founders of the Association of Proletarian-Revolutionary Authors.

Through the late twenties and early thirties, Kisch wrote a series of books chronicling his journeys to the Russian SFSR, the U.S.A., Soviet Central Asia and China. These later works are more strongly informed by Kisch's communist politics. Whereas in his earlier collections of reportage he had explicitly stated that a reporter should remain impartial, Kisch came to feel that it was necessary for a writer to engage politically with what he was reporting on.

Exile edit

On 28 February 1933, the day after the Reichstag fire, Kisch was one of many prominent opponents of Nazism to be arrested. He was briefly imprisoned in Spandau Prison, but as a Czechoslovak citizen, was expelled from Germany. His works were banned and burnt in Germany, but he continued to write for the Czech and émigré German press, bearing witness to the horrors of the Nazi takeover.

In the years between the Machtergreifung and the outbreak of World War II, Kisch continued to travel widely to report and to speak publicly in the anti-fascist cause.

Reichstag Fire counter-trial and exclusion from Britain edit

Following the Reichstag Fire Trial organised by the Nazi government to lay the blame for the fire on Communist opponents, a counter-trial was organized in 1933 in London by a group of lawyers, democrats and other anti-Nazi groups under the aegis of German Communist émigrés. Kisch was to be a witness at the counter trial but was refused leave to land in the United Kingdom because of his "known subversive activities".

Attempted exclusion from Australia edit

 
Kisch on board the Strathaird bound for Australia; November 1934
 
On 17 February 1935 addressed 18,000 in The Domain, Sydney

Kisch's visit to Australia as a delegate to the All-Australian Congress Against War and Fascism [3] in 1934 was later chronicled in his book Landung in Australien (Australian Landfall) (1937).[4][5]

The right-wing Australian government refused Kisch entry from the ship Strathaird at Fremantle and Melbourne because of his previous exclusion from the UK. Kisch then took matters into his own hands. He jumped five metres from the deck of his ship onto the quayside at Melbourne, breaking his leg in the process. He was bundled back on board but this dramatic action mobilised the Australian left in support of Kisch. When the Strathaird docked in Sydney, proceedings were taken against the Captain on the grounds that he was illegally detaining Kisch. Justice H. V. Evatt ordered that Kisch be released.[6] Under the Immigration Restriction Act 1901, visitors could be refused entry if they failed a dictation test in any European language. As soon as Kisch was released, he was re-arrested and was one of the very few Europeans to be given the test; he was tested in Scottish Gaelic because it was thought he might pass if tested in other European languages. The officer who tested him had grown up in northern Scotland but did not have a particularly good grasp of Scottish Gaelic himself. In the High Court case of R v Wilson; ex parte Kisch, the court found that Scottish Gaelic was not within the fair meaning of the Act, and overturned Kisch's convictions for being an illegal immigrant.[7]

On 17 February 1935, Kisch addressed a crowd of 18,000 in the Sydney Domain warning of the dangers of Hitler's Nazi regime, of another war and of concentration camps.

Spain, France, the United States and Mexico edit

In 1937 and 1938, Kisch was in Spain, where left-wingers from across the world had been drawn by the Spanish Civil War. He travelled across the country, speaking in the Republican cause, and his reports from the front line were widely published.

Following the Munich Agreement of 1938 and the subsequent Nazi occupation of Bohemia six months later, Kisch was unable to return to the country of his birth. Once war broke out, Paris, which he had made his main home since 1933, also became too dangerous for an outspoken Jewish communist whose native land no longer existed. In late 1939, Kisch and his wife Gisela sailed for New York where, once again, he was initially denied entry. He eventually landed at Ellis Island on 28 December, but as he only had a transit visa moved on to Mexico in October 1940.

He remained in Mexico for the next five years, one of a circle of European communist refugees, notable among them Anna Seghers and Ludwig Renn, and the German-Czech writer Lenka Reinerová. He continued to write, producing a book on Mexico and a memoir, Marktplatz der Sensationen (Sensation Fair) (1941). In this period of exile, Kisch's work regularly returned to the themes of his Prague home and his Jewish roots and in March 1946 (after troubles in securing a Czechoslovak visa) he was able to return to his birthplace. Immediately after the return he started to travel around the country and work as a journalist again.

Legacy edit

 
Kisch and his birth house portrayed on a stamp issued by the GDR to celebrate the centenary of his birth

Kisch died of a stroke[2] two years after his return to Prague, shortly after the Communist party seized complete power. Kisch is buried in the Vinohrady Cemetery, Prague, Czech Republic.

After his death, Kisch's life and work were held up as exemplary in the GDR. The attitude to both in West Germany was more complicated due to his communism. Nonetheless, when Stern magazine founded a prestigious award for German journalism in 1977, it was named the Egon Erwin Kisch Prize in his honour.[8]

Kisch's work as a writer and communist journalist inspired Australian left wing intellectuals and writers such as Katharine Susannah Prichard, E. J. Brady, Vance and Nettie Palmer and Louis Esson. This group formed the nucleus of what later became the Writers League, drawing on the example of Egon Kisch’s own journalistic dedication to reportage.

Kisch has appeared as a character in novels by Australian authors. Without naming him, his visit to Australia, the leap from the ship and the court case challenging the validity of the language test are mentioned in Kylie Tennant's Ride on Stranger (novel) (1943). He is a minor character in Frank Hardy's Power Without Glory (1950), which was filmed for television in (1976), and plays a central, if fictionalised, role in Nicholas Hasluck's Our Man K (1999). He appears in Sulari Gentill's detective novel Paving the New Road (2012) along with other real persons such as Nancy Wake and Unity Mitford.

 
Tomb of Kisch in the Vinohrady Cemetery in Prague

Selected bibliography edit

English titles are given where the work has been translated into English. All dates refer to earliest publication.

  • Aus Prager Gassen und Nächten (1912) – An early collection of reports from Prague's underworld
  • Der Mädchenhirt (1914) – Kisch's only novel, again set in the Prague underworld
  • Der Fall des Generalstabschefs Redl (1924)
  • Der rasende Reporter (1924)
  • Hetzjagd durch die Zeit (1925)
  • Elliptical Treadmill (1925) – On Six Days of Berlin
  • Zaren, Popen, Bolschewiken (1926) – On the Soviet Union
  • Schreib das auf, Kisch! (1929)
  • Paradies Amerika (1929) – On the United States
  • Asien gründlich verändert (Changing Asia) (1932) – On Soviet Central Asia
  • China Geheim (Secret China) (1933) – On China
  • Geschichten aus sieben Ghettos (Tales from Seven Ghettos) (1934) – A collection with a Jewish theme
  • Landung in Australien (Australian Landfall) (1937)
  • Soldaten am Meeresstrand (1938) – Reports from the Spanish Civil War
  • Die drei Kühe (The Three Cows) (1939) – Report from the Spanish Civil War
  • Marktplatz der Sensationen (Sensation Fair) (1941) – memoir up to 1914
  • Entdeckungen in Mexiko (1945)

References edit

  1. ^ Bryant, Chad (2021). Prague: Belonging and the Modern City. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. 57-105 [1]
  2. ^ a b Rasmussen, Carolyn (2000). "Kisch, Egon Erwin (1885–1948)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 15. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538.
  3. ^ Kisch in Australia by Heidi Zogbaum, page 32
  4. ^ Kisch, E. E. (1937) Australian Landfall, translated from the German by John Fisher and Irene and Kevin Fitzgerald. Secker and Warburg, London.
  5. ^ Kisch, E. E. (1937) Landung in Australien. Verlag Allert de Lange, Amsterdam.
  6. ^ R v Carter; Ex parte Kisch [1934] HCA 50, (1934) 52 CLR 221 (16 November 1934), High Court (Australia).
  7. ^ R v Wilson ; Ex parte Kisch [1934] HCA 63, (1934) 52 CLR 234 (19 December 1934), High Court (Australia).
  8. ^ Macintyre, Stuart (2001), Davison, Graeme; Hirst, John; MacIntyre, Stuart (eds.), "Kisch, Egon", The Oxford Companion to Australian History, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195515039.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-551503-9, retrieved 3 July 2021

Further reading edit

  • Blackshield, Tony; Williams, George (2010). Australian Constitutional Law and Theory (5th ed.). Annandale (NSW): Federation Press. pp. 915–916. ISBN 978-1-86287-773-3.
  • Cochrane, Peter (2008). . Commonwealth History Project. The National Centre for History Education. Archived from the original on 18 June 2005. Retrieved 3 August 2008.
  • Gatterer, Joachim (2019): "History, literature and propaganda: Egon Erwin Kisch in the Spanish Civil War, in: Alía Miranda, Francisco/Higueras Castañeda, Eduardo/Selva Iniesta, Antonio (ed.): Hasta pronto, amigos de España. Las Brigadas Internacionales en el 80 aniversario de su despedida de la Guerra Civil (1938–2018), Albacete: CEDOBI 2019, 249–261.
  • Hofmann, Fritz; Poláček, Josef (1985). Servus, Kisch! Erinnerungen, Rezensionen, Anekdoten. Berlin and Weimar: Aufbau-Verlag. OCLC 491176002.
  • Howells, A. F. (1983). Against the Stream: The Memories of a Philosophical Anarchist, 1927–1939. Melbourne: Hyland House. ISBN 0-908090-48-X.
  • Meacham, Steve (8 February 2005). "One jump ahead of a ban on freedom". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
  • Schlenstedt, Dieter (1985). Egon Erwin Kisch: Leben und Werk. Berlin: Volkseigener Verlag Volk und Wissen.
  • Schwartz, Larry (8 November 2004). "The first boat person". The Age. Melbourne. Retrieved 3 June 2011.
  • Segel, Howard B. (1997). Egon Erwin Kisch, the Raging Reporter: A Bio-Anthology. West Lafayette, Indiana: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-100-1.
  • Slater, Ken (1979). "Egon Kisch: a Biographical Outline". Labour History. 36 (36). Australian Society for the Study of Labour History: 94–103. doi:10.2307/27508355. JSTOR 27508355.
  • Spector, Scott (2006). Kisch, Egon Erwin. YIVO Institute for Jewish Research. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Zogbaum, Heidi (2004). Kisch in Australia: The Untold Story. Melbourne: Scribe Publications. ISBN 978-1-920769-35-2.

External links edit

  • Kisch memoir of first 30 years in Prague
  • Detailed biography in report of an exhibition on Kisch in Vienna, 2006 (in German)
  • Nicholas Hasluck on writing about Kisch 15 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Newspaper clippings about Egon Kisch in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

egon, kisch, egon, erwin, kisch, april, 1885, march, 1948, austrian, czechoslovak, writer, journalist, wrote, german, styled, himself, rasende, reporter, racing, reporter, countless, travels, corners, globe, equally, numerous, articles, produced, relatively, s. Egon Erwin Kisch 29 April 1885 31 March 1948 was an Austrian and Czechoslovak writer and journalist who wrote in German He styled himself Der Rasende Reporter The Racing Reporter for his countless travels to the far corners of the globe and his equally numerous articles produced in a relatively short time Hetzjagd durch die Zeit 1925 Kisch was noted for his development of literary reportage his opposition to Adolf Hitler s Nazi regime and his Communism Egon KischBorn 1885 04 29 April 29 1885Prague Austria HungaryDiedMarch 31 1948 1948 03 31 aged 62 Prague CzechoslovakiaResting placeVinohrady Cemetery PraguePolitical partyCommunist Party of AustriaMilitary serviceAllegianceAustria HungaryBranch serviceAustro Hungarian Navy Austro Hungarian ArmyYears of service1914 1918Unit11th Infantry RegimentBattles warsFirst World War Serbian campaign Battle of the Drina Eastern Front WIA Egon Kisch in Melbourne in 1934 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Communist 1 2 Exile 1 3 Reichstag Fire counter trial and exclusion from Britain 1 4 Attempted exclusion from Australia 1 5 Spain France the United States and Mexico 1 6 Legacy 2 Selected bibliography 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksBiography editKisch was born into a wealthy German speaking Sephardi Jewish family in Prague at that time part of the Austro Hungarian Empire and began his journalistic career as a reporter for Bohemia a Prague German language newspaper in 1906 In 1910 Bohemia began publishing a weekly column of Kisch s essays Prague Forays ran for more than a year and along with several books containing reprinted and original material made Kisch a local celebrity These feuilletons which consisted of he called little novels about the city were characterised by an interest in prisons work houses and the lives of the poor of Prague His style was inspired by Jan Neruda Emile Zola and Charles Dickens s Sketches by Boz Before World War I he uncovered the spy scandal involving Alfred Redl which he published anonymously at the time 1 At the outbreak of World War I Kisch was called up for military service and became a corporal in the Austrian army He fought on the front line in Serbia and the Carpathians and his wartime experiences were later recorded in Schreib das auf Kisch Write That Down Kisch 1929 He was briefly imprisoned in 1916 for publishing reports from the front that criticised the Austrian military s conduct of the war but nonetheless later served in the army s press quarters along with fellow writers Franz Werfel and Robert Musil Communist edit The war radicalised Kisch He deserted in October 1918 as the war came to an end and played a leading role in the abortive left wing revolution in Vienna in November of that year Werfel s novel Barbara oder die Frommigkeit 1929 portrays the events of this period and Kisch was the inspiration for one of the novel s characters Although the revolution failed in 1919 Kisch became a member of the Austrian Communist Party and remained a Communist for the rest of his life 2 Between 1921 and 1930 Kisch though a citizen of Czechoslovakia lived primarily in Berlin where his work found a new and appreciative audience In books of collected journalism such as Der rasende Reporter The Whirling Reporter 1924 he cultivated the image of a witty gritty daring reporter always on the move a cigarette clamped doggedly between his lips His work and his public persona found an echo in the artistic movement of Neue Sachlichkeit a major strand in the culture of the Weimar Republic nbsp Willi Munzenberg set up a multitude of Communist Front organizations sending Egon Kisch to promote Comintern propaganda throughout the world From 1925 onwards Kisch was a speaker and operative of the communist international and a senior figure in the publishing empire of the West European branch of the Comintern run by communist propagandist Willi Munzenberg In 1928 Kisch was one of the founders of the Association of Proletarian Revolutionary Authors Through the late twenties and early thirties Kisch wrote a series of books chronicling his journeys to the Russian SFSR the U S A Soviet Central Asia and China These later works are more strongly informed by Kisch s communist politics Whereas in his earlier collections of reportage he had explicitly stated that a reporter should remain impartial Kisch came to feel that it was necessary for a writer to engage politically with what he was reporting on Exile edit On 28 February 1933 the day after the Reichstag fire Kisch was one of many prominent opponents of Nazism to be arrested He was briefly imprisoned in Spandau Prison but as a Czechoslovak citizen was expelled from Germany His works were banned and burnt in Germany but he continued to write for the Czech and emigre German press bearing witness to the horrors of the Nazi takeover In the years between the Machtergreifung and the outbreak of World War II Kisch continued to travel widely to report and to speak publicly in the anti fascist cause Reichstag Fire counter trial and exclusion from Britain edit Following the Reichstag Fire Trial organised by the Nazi government to lay the blame for the fire on Communist opponents a counter trial was organized in 1933 in London by a group of lawyers democrats and other anti Nazi groups under the aegis of German Communist emigres Kisch was to be a witness at the counter trial but was refused leave to land in the United Kingdom because of his known subversive activities Attempted exclusion from Australia edit Main article Attempted exclusion of Egon Kisch from Australia nbsp Kisch on board the Strathaird bound for Australia November 1934 nbsp On 17 February 1935 addressed 18 000 in The Domain Sydney Kisch s visit to Australia as a delegate to the All Australian Congress Against War and Fascism 3 in 1934 was later chronicled in his book Landung in Australien Australian Landfall 1937 4 5 The right wing Australian government refused Kisch entry from the ship Strathaird at Fremantle and Melbourne because of his previous exclusion from the UK Kisch then took matters into his own hands He jumped five metres from the deck of his ship onto the quayside at Melbourne breaking his leg in the process He was bundled back on board but this dramatic action mobilised the Australian left in support of Kisch When the Strathaird docked in Sydney proceedings were taken against the Captain on the grounds that he was illegally detaining Kisch Justice H V Evatt ordered that Kisch be released 6 Under the Immigration Restriction Act 1901 visitors could be refused entry if they failed a dictation test in any European language As soon as Kisch was released he was re arrested and was one of the very few Europeans to be given the test he was tested in Scottish Gaelic because it was thought he might pass if tested in other European languages The officer who tested him had grown up in northern Scotland but did not have a particularly good grasp of Scottish Gaelic himself In the High Court case of R v Wilson ex parte Kisch the court found that Scottish Gaelic was not within the fair meaning of the Act and overturned Kisch s convictions for being an illegal immigrant 7 On 17 February 1935 Kisch addressed a crowd of 18 000 in the Sydney Domain warning of the dangers of Hitler s Nazi regime of another war and of concentration camps Spain France the United States and Mexico edit In 1937 and 1938 Kisch was in Spain where left wingers from across the world had been drawn by the Spanish Civil War He travelled across the country speaking in the Republican cause and his reports from the front line were widely published Following the Munich Agreement of 1938 and the subsequent Nazi occupation of Bohemia six months later Kisch was unable to return to the country of his birth Once war broke out Paris which he had made his main home since 1933 also became too dangerous for an outspoken Jewish communist whose native land no longer existed In late 1939 Kisch and his wife Gisela sailed for New York where once again he was initially denied entry He eventually landed at Ellis Island on 28 December but as he only had a transit visa moved on to Mexico in October 1940 He remained in Mexico for the next five years one of a circle of European communist refugees notable among them Anna Seghers and Ludwig Renn and the German Czech writer Lenka Reinerova He continued to write producing a book on Mexico and a memoir Marktplatz der Sensationen Sensation Fair 1941 In this period of exile Kisch s work regularly returned to the themes of his Prague home and his Jewish roots and in March 1946 after troubles in securing a Czechoslovak visa he was able to return to his birthplace Immediately after the return he started to travel around the country and work as a journalist again Legacy edit nbsp Kisch and his birth house portrayed on a stamp issued by the GDR to celebrate the centenary of his birth Kisch died of a stroke 2 two years after his return to Prague shortly after the Communist party seized complete power Kisch is buried in the Vinohrady Cemetery Prague Czech Republic After his death Kisch s life and work were held up as exemplary in the GDR The attitude to both in West Germany was more complicated due to his communism Nonetheless when Stern magazine founded a prestigious award for German journalism in 1977 it was named the Egon Erwin Kisch Prize in his honour 8 Kisch s work as a writer and communist journalist inspired Australian left wing intellectuals and writers such as Katharine Susannah Prichard E J Brady Vance and Nettie Palmer and Louis Esson This group formed the nucleus of what later became the Writers League drawing on the example of Egon Kisch s own journalistic dedication to reportage Kisch has appeared as a character in novels by Australian authors Without naming him his visit to Australia the leap from the ship and the court case challenging the validity of the language test are mentioned in Kylie Tennant s Ride on Stranger novel 1943 He is a minor character in Frank Hardy s Power Without Glory 1950 which was filmed for television in 1976 and plays a central if fictionalised role in Nicholas Hasluck s Our Man K 1999 He appears in Sulari Gentill s detective novel Paving the New Road 2012 along with other real persons such as Nancy Wake and Unity Mitford nbsp Tomb of Kisch in the Vinohrady Cemetery in PragueSelected bibliography editEnglish titles are given where the work has been translated into English All dates refer to earliest publication Aus Prager Gassen und Nachten 1912 An early collection of reports from Prague s underworld Der Madchenhirt 1914 Kisch s only novel again set in the Prague underworld Der Fall des Generalstabschefs Redl 1924 Der rasende Reporter 1924 Hetzjagd durch die Zeit 1925 Elliptical Treadmill 1925 On Six Days of Berlin Zaren Popen Bolschewiken 1926 On the Soviet Union Schreib das auf Kisch 1929 Paradies Amerika 1929 On the United States Asien grundlich verandert Changing Asia 1932 On Soviet Central Asia China Geheim Secret China 1933 On China Geschichten aus sieben Ghettos Tales from Seven Ghettos 1934 A collection with a Jewish theme Landung in Australien Australian Landfall 1937 Soldaten am Meeresstrand 1938 Reports from the Spanish Civil War Die drei Kuhe The Three Cows 1939 Report from the Spanish Civil War Marktplatz der Sensationen Sensation Fair 1941 memoir up to 1914 Entdeckungen in Mexiko 1945 References edit Bryant Chad 2021 Prague Belonging and the Modern City Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 57 105 1 a b Rasmussen Carolyn 2000 Kisch Egon Erwin 1885 1948 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 15 National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Kisch in Australia by Heidi Zogbaum page 32 Kisch E E 1937 Australian Landfall translated from the German by John Fisher and Irene and Kevin Fitzgerald Secker and Warburg London Kisch E E 1937 Landung in Australien Verlag Allert de Lange Amsterdam R v Carter Ex parte Kisch 1934 HCA 50 1934 52 CLR 221 16 November 1934 High Court Australia R v Wilson Ex parte Kisch 1934 HCA 63 1934 52 CLR 234 19 December 1934 High Court Australia Macintyre Stuart 2001 Davison Graeme Hirst John MacIntyre Stuart eds Kisch Egon The Oxford Companion to Australian History Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195515039 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 551503 9 retrieved 3 July 2021Further reading editBlackshield Tony Williams George 2010 Australian Constitutional Law and Theory 5th ed Annandale NSW Federation Press pp 915 916 ISBN 978 1 86287 773 3 Cochrane Peter 2008 The Big Jump Egon Kisch in Australia Commonwealth History Project The National Centre for History Education Archived from the original on 18 June 2005 Retrieved 3 August 2008 Gatterer Joachim 2019 History literature and propaganda Egon Erwin Kisch in the Spanish Civil War in Alia Miranda Francisco Higueras Castaneda Eduardo Selva Iniesta Antonio ed Hasta pronto amigos de Espana Las Brigadas Internacionales en el 80 aniversario de su despedida de la Guerra Civil 1938 2018 Albacete CEDOBI 2019 249 261 Hofmann Fritz Polacek Josef 1985 Servus Kisch Erinnerungen Rezensionen Anekdoten Berlin and Weimar Aufbau Verlag OCLC 491176002 Howells A F 1983 Against the Stream The Memories of a Philosophical Anarchist 1927 1939 Melbourne Hyland House ISBN 0 908090 48 X Meacham Steve 8 February 2005 One jump ahead of a ban on freedom The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 3 June 2011 Schlenstedt Dieter 1985 Egon Erwin Kisch Leben und Werk Berlin Volkseigener Verlag Volk und Wissen Schwartz Larry 8 November 2004 The first boat person The Age Melbourne Retrieved 3 June 2011 Segel Howard B 1997 Egon Erwin Kisch the Raging Reporter A Bio Anthology West Lafayette Indiana Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 100 1 Slater Ken 1979 Egon Kisch a Biographical Outline Labour History 36 36 Australian Society for the Study of Labour History 94 103 doi 10 2307 27508355 JSTOR 27508355 Spector Scott 2006 Kisch Egon Erwin YIVO Institute for Jewish Research a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Zogbaum Heidi 2004 Kisch in Australia The Untold Story Melbourne Scribe Publications ISBN 978 1 920769 35 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Egon Erwin Kisch Kisch memoir of first 30 years in Prague Detailed biography in report of an exhibition on Kisch in Vienna 2006 in German Nicholas Hasluck on writing about Kisch Archived 15 May 2020 at the Wayback Machine Newspaper clippings about Egon Kisch in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Portals nbsp Australia nbsp Biography nbsp Socialism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Egon Kisch amp oldid 1218929106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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