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Erika Mann

Erika Julia Hedwig Mann (9 November 1905 – 27 August 1969) was a German actress and writer, daughter of the novelist Thomas Mann.

Erika Mann
Mann c. 1938
Born
Erika Julia Hedwig Mann

(1905-11-09)9 November 1905
Died27 August 1969(1969-08-27) (aged 63)
Zürich, Switzerland
Resting placeKilchberg cemetery, Zürich
Occupation(s)Writer, war correspondent, actress
Spouse(s)
(m. 1926⁠–⁠1929)

(m. 1935⁠–⁠1969)
Parent(s)Thomas Mann
Katia Mann

Erika lived a bohemian lifestyle in Berlin and became a critic of National Socialism. After Hitler came to power in 1933, she moved to Switzerland, and married the poet W. H. Auden, purely to obtain a British passport and so avoid becoming stateless when the Germans cancelled her citizenship. She continued to attack Nazism, most notably with her 1938 book School for Barbarians, a critique of the Nazi education system.

During World War II, Mann worked for the BBC and became a war correspondent attached to the Allied forces after D-Day. She attended the Nuremberg trials before moving to America to support her exiled parents. Her criticisms of American foreign policy led to her being considered for deportation. After her parents moved to Switzerland in 1952, she also settled there. She wrote a biography of her father and died in Zurich in 1969.

Biography

Early life

Erika Mann was born in Munich, the first-born daughter of writer and later Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann and his wife, Katia (née Pringsheim), the daughter of an intellectual German family of Jewish heritage.[1][2] She was named after Katia Mann's brother Erik, who died early, Thomas Mann's mother Julia Mann, and her great-grandmother Hedwig Dohm. She was baptized Protestant, just as her mother had been. Thomas Mann expressed in a letter to his brother Heinrich Mann his disappointment about the birth of his first child:

It is a girl; a disappointment for me, as I want to admit between us, because I had greatly desired a son and will not stop doing so. [...] I feel a son is much more full of poetry [poesievoller], more than a sequel and restart for myself under new circumstances.[3]

Nevertheless, he later candidly confessed in the notes of his diary, that he "preferred, of the six, the two oldest [Erika and Klaus] and little Elisabeth with a strange decisiveness".[4]

In Erika he had a particular trust, which later showed itself in that she exercised a great influence on the important decisions of her father.[5] Her particular role was also known by her siblings, as her brother Golo Mann remembered: "Little Erika must salt the soup".[6] This reference to the twelve-year-old Erika from the year 1917 was an often-used phrase in the Mann family.

After Erika's birth came that of her brother Klaus, with whom she was personally close her entire life. They went about "like twins", and Klaus described their closeness as follows: "our solidarity was absolute and without reservation".[7] Eventually there were four more children in total, including Golo, Monika, Elisabeth, and Michael. The children grew up in Munich. On their mother's side the family belonged to the influential urban upper class, and their father came from a commercial family from Lübeck and already had published the successful novel Buddenbrooks in 1901. The Mann home was a gathering-place for intellectuals and artists, and Erika was hired for her first theater engagement before finishing her Abitur at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin.

Education and early theatrical work

In 1914, the Mann family obtained a villa on 1 Poschingerstraße in Bogenhausen, which in the family would come to be known as "Poschi." From 1912 to 1914, Erika Mann attended a private school with her brother, joining for a year the Bogenhausener Volksschule, and from 1915 to 1920 she attended the Höhere Mädchenschule am St. Annaplatz. In May 1921, she transferred to the Munich-based Luisengymnasium. Together with her brother Klaus, she befriended children in the neighborhood, including Bruno Walter's daughters, Gretel and Lotte Walter, as well as Ricki Hallgarten, the son of a Jewish intellectual family.

Erika Mann founded an ambitious theater troupe, the Laienbund Deutscher Mimiker. While still a student at the Munich Luisengymnasium, Max Reinhardt engaged her to appear on the stage of the Deutsches Theater in Berlin for the first time. The partially mischievous pranks that she undertook in the so-called "Herzogpark-Bande" ("Herzogpark gang") with Klaus and her friends prompted her parents to send both her and Klaus to a progressive residential school, the Bergschule Hochwaldhausen, located in Vogelsberg in Oberhessen. This period in Erika Mann's schooling lasted from April to July 1922; subsequently she returned to the Luisengymnasium. In 1924 she passed the Abitur, albeit with poor marks, and began her theatrical studies in Berlin that were again interrupted, because of her numerous engagements in Hamburg, Munich, Berlin and elsewhere.

1920s and 1930s

In 1924, Erika Mann began theater studies in Berlin and acted there and in Bremen. In 1925, she played in the première of her brother Klaus's play Anja und Esther. The play, about a group of four friends who were in love with each other, opened in October 1925 to considerable publicity. In 1924 the actor Gustaf Gründgens had offered to direct the production and play one of the lead male roles, alongside Klaus, with Erika and Pamela Wedekind as the female leads. During the year they worked on the play together, Klaus was engaged to Wedekind and Erika became engaged to Gründgens. Erika and Pamela were also in a relationship together, as were, for a time, Klaus and Gustaf. For their honeymoon, in July 1926, Erika and Gründgens stayed in a hotel that Erika and Wedekind had used as a couple shortly before, with the latter checking in dressed as a man.[8] Erika's marriage to Gründgens was short-lived and they were soon living apart before divorcing in 1929.

Erika Mann would later have relationships with Therese Giehse, Annemarie Schwarzenbach and Betty Knox, with whom she served as a war correspondent during World War II.[9]

In 1927, Erika and Klaus undertook a trip around the world,[1] which they documented in their book Rundherum; Das Abenteuer einer Weltreise. The following year, she became active in journalism and politics. She was involved as an actor in the 1931 film about lesbianism, Mädchen in Uniform, directed by Leontine Sagan, but left the production before its completion. In 1932 she published Stoffel fliegt übers Meer, the first of seven children's books.

In 1932, Erika Mann was denounced by the Brownshirts after she read a pacifist poem to an anti-war meeting. She was fired from an acting role after the theatre concerned was threatened with a boycott by the Nazis. Mann successfully sued both the theatre and also a Nazi-run newspaper.[10] Also in 1932 Mann had a role, alongside Therese Giehse, in the film Peter Voss, Thief of Millions.

In January 1933, Erika, Klaus and Therese Giehse founded a cabaret in Munich called Die Pfeffermühle, for which Erika wrote most of the material, much of which was anti-Fascist. The cabaret lasted two months before the Nazis forced it to close and Mann left Germany.[10] She was the last member of the Mann family to leave Germany after the Nazi regime was elected. She saved many of Thomas Mann's papers from their Munich home when she escaped to Zurich. In 1936, Die Pfeffermühle opened again in Zurich and became a rallying point for German exiles.

In 1935, it became apparent that the Nazis were intending to strip Mann of her German citizenship;- her uncle, Heinrich Mann, was the first person to be stripped of German citizenship when the Nazis took office.[11] She asked Christopher Isherwood if he would marry her so she could become a British citizen. He declined but suggested she approach the gay poet W. H. Auden, who readily agreed to a marriage of convenience in 1935.[12] Mann and Auden never lived together, but remained on good terms throughout their lives and were still married when Mann died; she left him a small bequest in her will.[13][14] In 1936, Auden introduced Therese Giehse, Mann's lover, to the writer John Hampson and they too married so that Giehse could leave Germany.[13] In 1937, Mann moved to New York, where Die Pfeffermühle (as The Peppermill) opened its doors again. There Erika Mann lived with Therese Giehse, her brother Klaus and Annemarie Schwarzenbach, amid a large group of artists in exile that included Kurt Weill, Ernst Toller and Sonia Sekula.

In 1938, Mann and Klaus reported on the Spanish Civil War, and her book School for Barbarians, a critique of Nazi Germany's educational system, was published.[12] The following year, they published Escape to Life, a book about famous German exiles.

World War II

 
Female war correspondents in 1944, with Erika Mann on the far right and Betty Knox third from right

During World War II, Mann worked as a journalist in London, making radio broadcasts, in German, for the BBC throughout the Blitz and the Battle of Britain. After D-Day, she became a war correspondent attached to the Allied forces advancing across Europe. She reported from recent battlefields in France, Belgium and the Netherlands.[10] She entered Germany in June 1945 and was among the first Allied personnel to enter Aachen.

As soon as it was possible, she went to Munich to register a claim for the return of the Mann family home. When she arrived in Berlin on 3 July 1945, Mann was shocked at the level of destruction, describing the city as "a sea of devastation, shoreless and infinite".[10] She was equally angry at the complete lack of guilt displayed by some of the German civilians and officials that she met. During this period, as well as wearing an American uniform, Mann adopted an Anglo-American accent.

Mann attended the Nuremberg trial each day from the opening session, on 20 November 1945, until the court adjourned a month later for Christmas. She was present on 26 November when the first film evidence from an extermination camp was shown in the court room.[10] She interviewed the defense lawyers and ridiculed their arguments in her reports and made clear that she thought the court was indulging the behaviour of the defendants, in particular Hermann Göring.[9]

When the court adjourned for Christmas, Mann went to Zurich to spend time with her brother, Betty Knox and Therese Giehse. Mann's health was poor and on 1 January 1946, she collapsed and was hospitalised. Eventually, she was diagnosed with pleurisy. After a spell recovering at a spa in Arosa, Mann returned to Nuremberg in March 1946 to continue covering the war crimes trial.[10] In May 1946, Mann left Germany for California to help look after her father who was being treated for lung cancer.[12]

Later life

 
Gravestone of Erika Mann in Kilchberg

From America, Mann continued to comment on, and write about, the situation in Germany. She considered it a scandal that Göring had managed to commit suicide and was furious at the slow pace of the denazification process. In particular, Mann objected to what she considered the lenient treatment of cultural figures, such as the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler, who had stayed in Germany throughout the Nazi period.[15] Her views on Russia and on the Berlin Airlift led to her being branded a Communist in America.[10] Both Klaus and Erika came under an FBI investigation into their political views and rumored homosexuality. In 1949, becoming increasingly depressed and disillusioned over postwar Germany's occupation, Klaus Mann died by suicide. This event devastated and enraged Erika Mann.[9] In 1952, due to the anti-communist red scare and the numerous accusations from the House Committee on Un-American Activities, the Mann family left the US and she moved back to Switzerland with her parents. She had begun to help her father with his writing and had become one of his closest confidantes. After the deaths of her father and her brother Klaus, Erika Mann became responsible for their works.

Mann died in Zürich on 27 August 1969 from a brain tumour[1] and is buried at Friedhof Kilchberg in Zürich, also the site of her parents' graves.[16][17] She was 63.

Biographical films

  • Escape to Life: The Erika & Klaus Mann Story (2000)

Published works

  • All the Way Round: A Light-hearted Travel Book (with Klaus Mann, 1929)
  • The Book of the Riviera: Things You Won't Find in Baedekers (with Klaus Mann, 1931)
  • School for Barbarians: Education Under the Nazis (1938)
  • Escape to Life (1939)
  • The Lights go Down (1940)
  • The Other Germany (with Klaus Mann, 1940)
  • A Gang of Ten (1942)
  • The Last Year of Thomas Mann. A Revealing Memoir by His Daughter, Erika Mann (1958)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Erika Mann". Spartacus Educational. from the original on 13 October 2017. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  2. ^ Frisch, Shelley (2000). "Mann, Erika Julia Hedwig : American National Biography Online - oi". oxfordindex.oup.com. American National Biography Online. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1601049. from the original on 29 January 2019. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. ^ Thomas Mann/Heinrich Mann: Briefwechsel 1900–1949, S. 109
  4. ^ Thomas Mann: Tagebücher 1918–1921, Eintrag vom 10. März 1920
  5. ^ Marcel Reich-Ranicki: Thomas Mann und die Seinen, S. 184
  6. ^ Golo Mann: Meine Schwester Erika. In Erika Mann, Briefe II, S. 241
  7. ^ Klaus Mann: Der Wendepunkt, S. 102
  8. ^ Colm Tóibín (6 November 2008). "I Could Sleep with All of Them". London Review of Books. 30 (21). from the original on 20 January 2018. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  9. ^ a b c Ruth M. Pettis (2005). "Mann, Erika (1905-1969)" (PDF). glbtq Archives. (PDF) from the original on 12 January 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Lara Feigel (2017). The Bitter Taste of Victory, Life, Love and Art in the Ruins of the Reich. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4088-4513-4.
  11. ^ Adam Lebor & Roger Boyles (2000). Surriving Hitler, Choices, Corruption and Compromise in the Third Reich. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-85811-8.
  12. ^ a b c Louis L Snyder (1976). Encyclopedia of the Third Reich. Marlowe & Co. ISBN 1569249172.
  13. ^ a b David Martin & Edward Mendelson (24 April 2014). "Why Auden Married". The New York Review of Books. from the original on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  14. ^ "WH Auden (1907-1973)". BBC History. 2014. from the original on 11 March 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  15. ^ Giles MacDonogh (2007). After the Reich - From the Liberation of Vienna to the Berlin Airlift. John Murray. ISBN 978-0-7195-6770-4.
  16. ^ Wilson, Scott. Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More Than 14,000 Famous Persons, 3d ed.: 2 (Kindle Location 29738). McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. Kindle Edition.
  17. ^ Craig R. Whitney (18 July 1993). "Thomas Mann's Daughter an Informer". The New York Times. from the original on 18 August 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2017.

Further reading

  • Martin Mauthner: German Writers in French Exile, 1933-1940, Vallentine Mitchell, London, 2007, (ISBN 978 0 85303 540 4).

External links

  •   Media related to Erika Mann at Wikimedia Commons

erika, mann, politician, architect, from, kenya, erica, mann, erika, julia, hedwig, mann, november, 1905, august, 1969, german, actress, writer, daughter, novelist, thomas, mann, mann, 1938bornerika, julia, hedwig, mann, 1905, november, 1905munich, german, emp. For the MEP see Erika Mann politician For the architect from Kenya see Erica Mann Erika Julia Hedwig Mann 9 November 1905 27 August 1969 was a German actress and writer daughter of the novelist Thomas Mann Erika MannMann c 1938BornErika Julia Hedwig Mann 1905 11 09 9 November 1905Munich German EmpireDied27 August 1969 1969 08 27 aged 63 Zurich SwitzerlandResting placeKilchberg cemetery ZurichOccupation s Writer war correspondent actressSpouse s Gustaf Grundgens m 1926 1929 wbr W H Auden m 1935 1969 wbr Parent s Thomas MannKatia MannErika lived a bohemian lifestyle in Berlin and became a critic of National Socialism After Hitler came to power in 1933 she moved to Switzerland and married the poet W H Auden purely to obtain a British passport and so avoid becoming stateless when the Germans cancelled her citizenship She continued to attack Nazism most notably with her 1938 book School for Barbarians a critique of the Nazi education system During World War II Mann worked for the BBC and became a war correspondent attached to the Allied forces after D Day She attended the Nuremberg trials before moving to America to support her exiled parents Her criticisms of American foreign policy led to her being considered for deportation After her parents moved to Switzerland in 1952 she also settled there She wrote a biography of her father and died in Zurich in 1969 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Education and early theatrical work 1 3 1920s and 1930s 1 4 World War II 1 5 Later life 2 Biographical films 3 Published works 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Erika Mann was born in Munich the first born daughter of writer and later Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann and his wife Katia nee Pringsheim the daughter of an intellectual German family of Jewish heritage 1 2 She was named after Katia Mann s brother Erik who died early Thomas Mann s mother Julia Mann and her great grandmother Hedwig Dohm She was baptized Protestant just as her mother had been Thomas Mann expressed in a letter to his brother Heinrich Mann his disappointment about the birth of his first child It is a girl a disappointment for me as I want to admit between us because I had greatly desired a son and will not stop doing so I feel a son is much more full of poetry poesievoller more than a sequel and restart for myself under new circumstances 3 Nevertheless he later candidly confessed in the notes of his diary that he preferred of the six the two oldest Erika and Klaus and little Elisabeth with a strange decisiveness 4 In Erika he had a particular trust which later showed itself in that she exercised a great influence on the important decisions of her father 5 Her particular role was also known by her siblings as her brother Golo Mann remembered Little Erika must salt the soup 6 This reference to the twelve year old Erika from the year 1917 was an often used phrase in the Mann family After Erika s birth came that of her brother Klaus with whom she was personally close her entire life They went about like twins and Klaus described their closeness as follows our solidarity was absolute and without reservation 7 Eventually there were four more children in total including Golo Monika Elisabeth and Michael The children grew up in Munich On their mother s side the family belonged to the influential urban upper class and their father came from a commercial family from Lubeck and already had published the successful novel Buddenbrooks in 1901 The Mann home was a gathering place for intellectuals and artists and Erika was hired for her first theater engagement before finishing her Abitur at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin Education and early theatrical work Edit In 1914 the Mann family obtained a villa on 1 Poschingerstrasse in Bogenhausen which in the family would come to be known as Poschi From 1912 to 1914 Erika Mann attended a private school with her brother joining for a year the Bogenhausener Volksschule and from 1915 to 1920 she attended the Hohere Madchenschule am St Annaplatz In May 1921 she transferred to the Munich based Luisengymnasium Together with her brother Klaus she befriended children in the neighborhood including Bruno Walter s daughters Gretel and Lotte Walter as well as Ricki Hallgarten the son of a Jewish intellectual family Erika Mann founded an ambitious theater troupe the Laienbund Deutscher Mimiker While still a student at the Munich Luisengymnasium Max Reinhardt engaged her to appear on the stage of the Deutsches Theater in Berlin for the first time The partially mischievous pranks that she undertook in the so called Herzogpark Bande Herzogpark gang with Klaus and her friends prompted her parents to send both her and Klaus to a progressive residential school the Bergschule Hochwaldhausen located in Vogelsberg in Oberhessen This period in Erika Mann s schooling lasted from April to July 1922 subsequently she returned to the Luisengymnasium In 1924 she passed the Abitur albeit with poor marks and began her theatrical studies in Berlin that were again interrupted because of her numerous engagements in Hamburg Munich Berlin and elsewhere 1920s and 1930s Edit In 1924 Erika Mann began theater studies in Berlin and acted there and in Bremen In 1925 she played in the premiere of her brother Klaus s play Anja und Esther The play about a group of four friends who were in love with each other opened in October 1925 to considerable publicity In 1924 the actor Gustaf Grundgens had offered to direct the production and play one of the lead male roles alongside Klaus with Erika and Pamela Wedekind as the female leads During the year they worked on the play together Klaus was engaged to Wedekind and Erika became engaged to Grundgens Erika and Pamela were also in a relationship together as were for a time Klaus and Gustaf For their honeymoon in July 1926 Erika and Grundgens stayed in a hotel that Erika and Wedekind had used as a couple shortly before with the latter checking in dressed as a man 8 Erika s marriage to Grundgens was short lived and they were soon living apart before divorcing in 1929 Erika Mann would later have relationships with Therese Giehse Annemarie Schwarzenbach and Betty Knox with whom she served as a war correspondent during World War II 9 In 1927 Erika and Klaus undertook a trip around the world 1 which they documented in their book Rundherum Das Abenteuer einer Weltreise The following year she became active in journalism and politics She was involved as an actor in the 1931 film about lesbianism Madchen in Uniform directed by Leontine Sagan but left the production before its completion In 1932 she published Stoffel fliegt ubers Meer the first of seven children s books In 1932 Erika Mann was denounced by the Brownshirts after she read a pacifist poem to an anti war meeting She was fired from an acting role after the theatre concerned was threatened with a boycott by the Nazis Mann successfully sued both the theatre and also a Nazi run newspaper 10 Also in 1932 Mann had a role alongside Therese Giehse in the film Peter Voss Thief of Millions In January 1933 Erika Klaus and Therese Giehse founded a cabaret in Munich called Die Pfeffermuhle for which Erika wrote most of the material much of which was anti Fascist The cabaret lasted two months before the Nazis forced it to close and Mann left Germany 10 She was the last member of the Mann family to leave Germany after the Nazi regime was elected She saved many of Thomas Mann s papers from their Munich home when she escaped to Zurich In 1936 Die Pfeffermuhle opened again in Zurich and became a rallying point for German exiles In 1935 it became apparent that the Nazis were intending to strip Mann of her German citizenship her uncle Heinrich Mann was the first person to be stripped of German citizenship when the Nazis took office 11 She asked Christopher Isherwood if he would marry her so she could become a British citizen He declined but suggested she approach the gay poet W H Auden who readily agreed to a marriage of convenience in 1935 12 Mann and Auden never lived together but remained on good terms throughout their lives and were still married when Mann died she left him a small bequest in her will 13 14 In 1936 Auden introduced Therese Giehse Mann s lover to the writer John Hampson and they too married so that Giehse could leave Germany 13 In 1937 Mann moved to New York where Die Pfeffermuhle as The Peppermill opened its doors again There Erika Mann lived with Therese Giehse her brother Klaus and Annemarie Schwarzenbach amid a large group of artists in exile that included Kurt Weill Ernst Toller and Sonia Sekula In 1938 Mann and Klaus reported on the Spanish Civil War and her book School for Barbarians a critique of Nazi Germany s educational system was published 12 The following year they published Escape to Life a book about famous German exiles World War II Edit Female war correspondents in 1944 with Erika Mann on the far right and Betty Knox third from right During World War II Mann worked as a journalist in London making radio broadcasts in German for the BBC throughout the Blitz and the Battle of Britain After D Day she became a war correspondent attached to the Allied forces advancing across Europe She reported from recent battlefields in France Belgium and the Netherlands 10 She entered Germany in June 1945 and was among the first Allied personnel to enter Aachen As soon as it was possible she went to Munich to register a claim for the return of the Mann family home When she arrived in Berlin on 3 July 1945 Mann was shocked at the level of destruction describing the city as a sea of devastation shoreless and infinite 10 She was equally angry at the complete lack of guilt displayed by some of the German civilians and officials that she met During this period as well as wearing an American uniform Mann adopted an Anglo American accent Mann attended the Nuremberg trial each day from the opening session on 20 November 1945 until the court adjourned a month later for Christmas She was present on 26 November when the first film evidence from an extermination camp was shown in the court room 10 She interviewed the defense lawyers and ridiculed their arguments in her reports and made clear that she thought the court was indulging the behaviour of the defendants in particular Hermann Goring 9 When the court adjourned for Christmas Mann went to Zurich to spend time with her brother Betty Knox and Therese Giehse Mann s health was poor and on 1 January 1946 she collapsed and was hospitalised Eventually she was diagnosed with pleurisy After a spell recovering at a spa in Arosa Mann returned to Nuremberg in March 1946 to continue covering the war crimes trial 10 In May 1946 Mann left Germany for California to help look after her father who was being treated for lung cancer 12 Later life Edit Gravestone of Erika Mann in Kilchberg From America Mann continued to comment on and write about the situation in Germany She considered it a scandal that Goring had managed to commit suicide and was furious at the slow pace of the denazification process In particular Mann objected to what she considered the lenient treatment of cultural figures such as the conductor Wilhelm Furtwangler who had stayed in Germany throughout the Nazi period 15 Her views on Russia and on the Berlin Airlift led to her being branded a Communist in America 10 Both Klaus and Erika came under an FBI investigation into their political views and rumored homosexuality In 1949 becoming increasingly depressed and disillusioned over postwar Germany s occupation Klaus Mann died by suicide This event devastated and enraged Erika Mann 9 In 1952 due to the anti communist red scare and the numerous accusations from the House Committee on Un American Activities the Mann family left the US and she moved back to Switzerland with her parents She had begun to help her father with his writing and had become one of his closest confidantes After the deaths of her father and her brother Klaus Erika Mann became responsible for their works Mann died in Zurich on 27 August 1969 from a brain tumour 1 and is buried at Friedhof Kilchberg in Zurich also the site of her parents graves 16 17 She was 63 Biographical films EditEscape to Life The Erika amp Klaus Mann Story 2000 Published works EditAll the Way Round A Light hearted Travel Book with Klaus Mann 1929 The Book of the Riviera Things You Won t Find in Baedekers with Klaus Mann 1931 School for Barbarians Education Under the Nazis 1938 Escape to Life 1939 The Lights go Down 1940 The Other Germany with Klaus Mann 1940 A Gang of Ten 1942 The Last Year of Thomas Mann A Revealing Memoir by His Daughter Erika Mann 1958 See also EditDohm Mann family tree ExilliteraturReferences Edit a b c Erika Mann Spartacus Educational Archived from the original on 13 October 2017 Retrieved 13 October 2017 Frisch Shelley 2000 Mann Erika Julia Hedwig American National Biography Online oi oxfordindex oup com American National Biography Online doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1601049 Archived from the original on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Thomas Mann Heinrich Mann Briefwechsel 1900 1949 S 109 Thomas Mann Tagebucher 1918 1921 Eintrag vom 10 Marz 1920 Marcel Reich Ranicki Thomas Mann und die Seinen S 184 Golo Mann Meine Schwester Erika In Erika Mann Briefe II S 241 Klaus Mann Der Wendepunkt S 102 Colm Toibin 6 November 2008 I Could Sleep with All of Them London Review of Books 30 21 Archived from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 10 May 2017 a b c Ruth M Pettis 2005 Mann Erika 1905 1969 PDF glbtq Archives Archived PDF from the original on 12 January 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2017 a b c d e f g Lara Feigel 2017 The Bitter Taste of Victory Life Love and Art in the Ruins of the Reich Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4088 4513 4 Adam Lebor amp Roger Boyles 2000 Surriving Hitler Choices Corruption and Compromise in the Third Reich Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 684 85811 8 a b c Louis L Snyder 1976 Encyclopedia of the Third Reich Marlowe amp Co ISBN 1569249172 a b David Martin amp Edward Mendelson 24 April 2014 Why Auden Married The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on 26 October 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2017 WH Auden 1907 1973 BBC History 2014 Archived from the original on 11 March 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2017 Giles MacDonogh 2007 After the Reich From the Liberation of Vienna to the Berlin Airlift John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6770 4 Wilson Scott Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed 2 Kindle Location 29738 McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers Kindle Edition Craig R Whitney 18 July 1993 Thomas Mann s Daughter an Informer The New York Times Archived from the original on 18 August 2017 Retrieved 10 May 2017 Further reading EditMartin Mauthner German Writers in French Exile 1933 1940 Vallentine Mitchell London 2007 ISBN 978 0 85303 540 4 External links Edit Media related to Erika Mann at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erika Mann amp oldid 1134905813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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