04095 am 22006493u 450 991028793850332120200220093120.0979-1-03-652456-11-78374-556-8(CKB)4100000006995653(MiAaPQ)EBC5527497(WaSeSS)IndRDA00125355(FrMaCLE)OB-obp-5973(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/37832(PPN)234055960(EXLCZ)99410000000699565320200706d2018 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Red Countess select autobiographical and fictional writing of Hermynia Zur Mühlen (1883-1951) /translated, annotated and with an essay by Lionel GossmanOpen Book Publishers2018Cambridge, England :Open Book Publishers,2018.1 online resource (vi, 443 pages) illustrations1-78374-554-1 1-78374-555-X Translator's Introductory Note -- Acknowledgments -- 1. The End and the Beginning: The Book of My Life -- 2. Supplement to The End and the Beginning -- 3. Notes on Persons and Events Mentioned in the Memoir -- 4. Feuilletons and Fairy Tales: A Sampling Editor's Note The Red Redeemer Confession High Treason Death of a Shade A Secondary Happiness The Señora Miss Brington We Have to Tell Them Painted on Ivory The Sparrow The Spectacles -- 5. Our Daughters the Nazi Girls. A Synopsis in English -- 6. Remembering Hermynia Zur Mühlen: A Tribute -- 7. Works by Hermynia Zur Mühlen in English Translation -- 8. Image Portfolio -- List of Illustrations.Born into a distinguished aristocratic family of the old Habsburg Empire, Hermynia Zur Mühlen spent much of her childhood and early youth travelling in Europe and North Africa with her diplomat father. Never comfortable with the traditional roles women were expected to play, as a young adult she broke both with her family and, after five years on his estate in the old Czarist Russia, with her German Junker husband, and set out as a independent, free-thinking individual, earning a precarious living as a writer. Zur Mühlen translated over 70 books from English, French and Russian into German, notably the novels of Upton Sinclair, which she turned into best-sellers in Germany; produced a series of detective novels under a pseudonym; wrote seven engaging and thought-provoking novels of her own, six of which were translated into English; contributed countless insightful short stories and articles to newspapers and magazines; and, having become a committed socialist, achieved international renown in the 1920s with her Fairy Tales for Workers’ Children, which were widely translated including into Chinese and Japanese. Because of her fervent and outspoken opposition to National Socialism, she and her life-long Jewish partner, Stefan Klein, had to flee first Germany, where they had settled, and then, in 1938, her native Austria. They found refuge in England, where Zur Mühlen died, forgotten and virtually penniless, in 1951.Authors, Austrian20th centuryBiographyAustriaSocial conditions19th centuryEurope, CentralSocial conditions20th centuryWorld War IFirst World WarGreat Warwomen's historymemoirbiographyautobiographyGermanyEuropean HistoryGerman literatureAustrian literaturefeminismNazismAustro-Hungarian EmpireAuthors, Austrian833.912Zur Mühlen Hermyniaauth599629Gossman LionelWaSeSSWaSeSSBOOK9910287938503321The Red Countess3361763UNINA