This title includes the previously unpublished letters of a major twentieth-century writer and his wife. Born in Vienna in 1881, Stefan Zweig was one of the most respected authors of his time. Foreseeing Nazi Germany's domination of Europe, Zweig left Austria in 1933. In 1941, following a successful lecture tour of South America and several months in New York, Stefan Zweig and his wife Lotte emigrated to Brazil. Despairing at Europe's future and feeling increasingly isolated, the Zweigs committed suicide together in 1942. Stefan Zweig was an incessant correspondent but as the 1930s progressed, it became difficult for him to maintain contact with friends and colleagues. As Zweig's correspondence all but ceased with the outbreak of World War II, little is known about his final years. Even less is known about Lotte Zweig, his second-wife, secretary and travel-companion. This book provides an analysis of the Zweigs' time together and for the first time reproduces personal letters, written by the couple in Argentina and Brazil, along with editorial commentary. Furthermore, Lotte finally emerges from her husband's shadows, with the letters offering significant insights into their relationship and her experience of exile.
This title includes the previously unpublished letters of a major twentieth-century writer and his wife. Born in Vienna in 1881, Stefan Zweig was one of the most respected authors of his time. Foreseeing Nazi Germany's domination of Europe, Zweig left Austria in 1933. In 1941, following a successful lecture tour of South America and several months in New York, Stefan Zweig and his wife Lotte emigrated to Brazil. Despairing at Europe's future and feeling increasingly isolated, the Zweigs committed suicide together in 1942. Stefan Zweig was an incessant correspondent but as the 1930s progressed, it became difficult for him to maintain contact with friends and colleagues. As Zweig's correspondence all but ceased with the outbreak of World War II, little is known about his final years. Even less is known about Lotte Zweig, his second-wife, secretary and travel-companion. This book provides an analysis of the Zweigs' time together and for the first time reproduces personal letters, written by the couple in Argentina and Brazil, along with editorial commentary. Furthermore, Lotte finally emerges from her husband's shadows, with the letters offering significant insights into their relationship and her experience of exile.
Introduction
Part I: Letters from Argentina and Brazil, 1940-41
Part II: New York Interlude, 1941
Part III: Letters from Brazil, 1941-42
Part IV: Postscript: Letter from Ernst Feder, Petrópolis, 1942
Dramatis Personae
The previously unpublished letters of a major twentieth-century writer and his wife.
Darién J. Davis is Associate Professor of history at Middlebury College, Vermont, USA. He has written on race, migration and twentieth century intellectual and cultural history. Stefan Zweig, novelist, essayist, biographer, dramatist and pacifist, was born in Vienna in 1881 into a wealthy Austrian-Jewish family. In the 1920s and 30s Zweig enjoyed great literary fame and was one of the most translated authors in the world. With the rise of Nazism, Zweig moved to England where, in 1940, he became a British subject. Following a lecture tour of South America and a period in New York, he moved to Brazil where in 1942, in despair at the future of Europe, he and his wife committed suicide. Oliver Marshall is an independent historian based in Sussex, England, who has published on South American and international migration history. He has been a research fellow at the University of London's Institute of Latin American Studies and at the University of Oxford's Centre for Brazilian Studies and its Centre for Latin American Studies. Lotte Zweig (née Altmann) was born in 1908 into a middle-class family of merchants in the Prussian city of Kattowitz. Soon after Hitler gained power in Germany, she moved to London. In 1934 Lotte was employed by Stefan Zweig as a multilingual secretary and research assistant. They married in 1939 and the following year left their home in Bath for the Americas.
"Davis and Marshall have filled a gap in Latin American literary
history by presenting us with a picture of the last years of the
famed author, cast adrift by the rise of Nazism and enforced exile.
The letters of Stefan and Lotte Zweig cast a flickering light on
the psyches of many Austrian and German Jews who, rejected by their
homelands, were incapable of either adapting to a new home or of
drawing sustenance from their Jewish origins. Aloof from the
satisfactions of popular acclaim and paralyzed by guilt over their
comfortable life in Brazil, the Zweigs broke through their
emotional isolation with an act that sealed their unique place in
literary history. Davis and Marshall create a coherent narrative
from the episodic correspondence and bring the role of Lotte into
view. But the Zweigs' brief sojourn in South America confirms the
European boundaries to Stefan's oevre and his marginalization from
Argentine, Brazilian, and Jewish history." -- Judith Laikin Elkin,
Latin American Jewish Studies Association
"These letters help to prove that definitive biographies do not
exist." -- Alberto Dines, author of Morte no Paraíso - A Tragedia
de Stefan Zweig (1981, 2004; Portuguese) and Tod im Paradies Die
Tragödie des Stefan Zweig (2006; German).
"These intimate, familial and war-haunted letters from Stefan and
Lotte Zweig throw a new light on their South American years, and
their last, tragic act. The informative and insightful introductory
texts provided by Oliver Marshall and Darién J. Davis additionally
illuminate the complex feelings both Zweigs had about their exile—a
condition which they chose, but did not survive. A worthwhile
addition to the annals of literary history during the darkest of
Europe's periods." -- Eva Hoffman, author of Lost in Translation: A
Life in a New Language (Penguin) and After Such Knowledge
(PublicAffairs).
"Based on hitherto unknown personal correspondence of Stefan and
Lotte Zweig, this thought-provoking and magisterial work of
literary-historical scholarship offers a rare blending of clarity,
psychological insight, and meticulous research. Refreshing, vastly
informative, and stunning in its revelations, this exemplary
biographical account is an indispensable standard for many fields."
Prof. Jeffrey B. Berlin, co-editor of Stefan Zweig - Friderike
Zweig: Briefwechsel 1912-1942 (2006); Stefan Zweig: Briefe
1897-1942. 4 vols. (1995-2005); Stefan Zweig: Briefwechsel mit
Bahr, Freud, Rilke und Schnitzler (1987), all published by S.
Fischer Verlag, Frankfurt a/M.
"Biographical research has already given us quite a good deal of
insight into Stefan Zweig`s and his second wife Lotte`s course of
life, about their years in exile, about their voluntary death in
February 1942 in Brazil. And yet there is still a lot that we do
not know. Stefan and Lotte Zweig`s letters from their last two
years, now published in a selection for the first time, give us a
clear view of their living conditions. Never before has this been
made possible in such immediacy. Now we can read these intimate
letters which allow us to witness both of them at such close range
and with a familiarity as has never been achieved before. These
letters are as much a fascinating record of domestic felicity as
they are a document of a world-historical tragedy. Finally, and for
the very first time, Lotte Zweig is given a distinct voice of her
own. And what we have surmised for so long turns out not to be
true: the image of the shy and sickly wife, always resigned and
submissive to her husband, is completely wrong. This is a
thoroughly engaging and really touching book. One will not put
these letters aside before having read them all through. It will be
of utmost importance for future biographical research about the
Austrian writer Stefan Zweig and his wife Lotte." -- Klemens
Renoldner, Director of Stefan Zweig Centre, University Salzburg,
Austria
These moving letters reveal the fragility of a sensitive couple
tragically caught between an imposing past and an uncertain
future.
*The Times Literary Supplement*
... provides a personal account of the Zweig's everyday life during
their last years... should be warmly welcomed since it is
accessible to the reading public and will prove useful to Zweig
scholars.
*Modern Austrian Literature*
Stefan and Lotte Zweig's South American Letters is a timely and
relevant publication and a good addition to the body of
correspondence already published about Stefan Zweig... This
collection of letters serves as a powerful reminder that the
experience of exile posed a daunting challenge to many people, not
all of whom were able to carry on with their lives and face the
uncertainty and perils of their situation.
*Newsletter of the International Feuchtwanger Society, Volume
10*
"This is a rich, rewarding, and exciting contribution to our
understanding of the final years in the life of Stefan and Lotte
Zweig based on letters they wrote and received in their South
American refuge from Nazism. It is also the first collection
to bring to light Lotte's long-neglected epistolary voice and the
central role that she played during this South American period in
helping to bring to light some of her husband's greatest and most
significant literary and autobiographical works." -- Leo Spitzer,
author of Hotel Bolivia: The Culture of Memory in a Refuge from
Nazism, Lives in Between: Assimilation and Marginality in Austria,
Brazil, West Africa, and most recently, Ghosts of Home: The
Afterlife of Czernowitz in Jewish Memory.
"Stefan Zweig's second wife, the much younger Lotte Altmann, has
been a shadowy figure until now- a dutiful secretary to the great
writer, but not much more. In this valuable collection of the
letters they wrote from South America in the last two years of
their tragically curtailed lives, she emerges as a woman of real
human warmth and spirit. Future biographers will find this book
essential to their understanding of a man driven to depression by
the fact that lofty ideals of universal peace cannot be sustained
in the face of a tyranny such as Nazism."-- Paul Bailey, author of
Uncle Rudolf: A Novel (Fourth Estate, 2002), and recipient of the
E.M. Forster Award from the American Academic of Arts and
Letters
"Among the many merits of this compelling, carefully edited volume
is the insight it provides into a problem confronting all refugees
from Nazidominated Europe: How might one begin conceiving a new
vision of home while 'the old country' went up in flames? They also
tell the melancholy story of how, barely a year after the euphoric
Bahia letter, Stefan and Lotte committed suicide in Petropolis,
above Rio."-- Jewish Review of Books
"Davis and Marshall offer a rare glimpse into the lives of the
prolific author Stefan Zweig and his second wife, Lotte, through a
collection of personal letters. [...] The editors present the vital
historical knowledge of not only the infamous couple, but also the
growing political turmoil that would escalate into WWII,
illuminated in part by the organization of the correspondence here.
Though written mostly to Lotte's brother and sister-in-law, the
letters reveal a growing depression and a lack of contact with
friends and family, illuminating both the general hopelessness
common to that era and the importance of a sense of belonging." --
Publishers Weekly
"... provides a detailed epistolary account of the life and times
of one of Europe's preeminent intellectuals. [...] Ultimately,
Stefan and Lotte Zweig's South American Letters reads as a cruel
story of dislocation and despair: from their arrival in Rio de
Janeiro to their dual-suicide in Petrópolis two years later, the
Zweigs were unable to relinquish themselves of the knowledge that
the people of Europe—once ‘pleasant and cultured'—were engaged in
an endless conflict for racial and territorial supremacy. Through
it all, however, the Zweigs continued to write, approaching their
correspondence as a form of therapy—one which allowed them, rather
like the tortured characters of W. G. Sebald or Joseph Roth, to
come to terms with what Stefan referred to in 1942 as the
‘incertainty and isolation' of war. Their pact complete, the Zweigs
succumbed to their desolation—and to the desolation of a generation
robbed of its homeland."-- Rain Taxi
They give us the best insight we have yet had into the last years
of this remarkable writer and of the wife who was more important
than many have hitherto allowed.
*Contemporary Review*
…well-edited and annotated … These frank, revealing and moving
letters to family members left behind in Europe, concluding with
the farewell ones written shortly before the suicides, are windows
into the minds and hearts of these exiles. The Zweigs’ depression
is manifest, and this persistent state, along with Lotte’s health
problems and Stefan’s awareness of old age awaiting him, goes a
long way to elucidating what to so many, both then and now, was an
inexplicable act.
*The Washington Times*
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