Skip to product information
1 of 1

Lives Interrupted – The Nazi Takeover and Autobiographical Testimonies from the 1939 Harvard Prize Competition

Regular price $95.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $95.00
Sold out
An examination of previously unexplored autobiographical manuscripts from emigrants escaping Nazi Germany.
  • 15 June 2026
View Product Details
In 1939, an extraordinary academic competition at Harvard University asked questions about the lives of emigrants from Nazi Germany before and after 1933. Around 200 autobiographical manuscripts, some of them extensive, were collected from emigrants from Germany and Austria. The corpus remains largely unexplored to this day. Detlef Garz takes a comprehensive look at the competition and focuses on the life stories of the participants: detailed experiences of life before 1933, suffering, resistance, emigration between 1933 and 1939, and arrival and resettlement in the host countries. His book thus lays the foundation for both the exploration of the autobiographical materials and the comprehension of exemplary life stories as well as the concept of (moral) misrecognition.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $95.00
Publisher: Verlag Barbara Budrich
Imprint: Verlag Barbara Budrich
Publication Date: 15 June 2026
Trim Size: 8.27 X 5.83 in
ISBN: 9783847434351
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / 20th Century, HISTORY / Social History
REVIEWS Icon
Prof. Dr. Detlef Garz is senior professor at Kiel University (CAU).

Prologue
Introduction

I. How it Came About: Scientific Prize Competitions as a Data Basis
1. ‘Old Fighters’: Biographies of ‘Hitler Germans’ – the Research of Theodore Abel
1.1 About the Framing
1.2 The Research Procedure
2. ‘My Life in Germany Before and After January 30, 1933’ or ‘To All who Know Germany Well Before and Since Hitler’. The Research of Gordon Allport, Sidney Fay and Edward Hartshorne
2.1 About the Framing
2.2 The Research Procedure
2.3 The Autobiographical Manuscripts and their Authors
2.4 The Motives of the Participants
2.5 Who did the Prizes Go To?

II. Selected Life Stories
1. Hilde Rosa Stern (1900-1961) – Duty and Justice: “There is only one morality, the fighting morality: for our friends and against our enemies”
1.1 Childhood
1.2 Stern Family
1.3 “Thrown from security into insecurity”
1.4 School, Education, Marriage, Divorce
1.5 1933: Exclusion
1.6 Resistance
1.7 Arrest, Concentration Camp Fuhlsbüttel, Pre-trial Imprisonment and Conviction for “aiding and abetting the preparation of a highly treasonable enterprise”
1.8 “That was my father”
1.9 The “day in court” and the Time in the Prison: The “combat morale”
1.10 The Exile: USA (1937-1946): “They were really hard years”
1.11 The ‘Homecoming’: GDR
2. Carl Paeschke (1895–1983) – On the Life of a More and More Disillusioned Social Democrat and his Resistance to National Socialism: ‘We were weak, but our leading men did not know it’
2.1 Winning the First Prize
2.2 Who was Carl Paeschke? Definition through the Homeland
2.3 Childhood and Youth: Kriescht, Berlin, Vietz: ‘Eine Welt stürzt ein’ (A World Collapses)
2.4 “But that brings us to the outbreak of the World War 1914-1918”
2.5 A “public career” Begins
2.6 As an Editor to the Owl Mountains (Eulengebirge)
2.7 “The Swastika grows”
2.8 “A people in ecstasy”
2.9 ‘The assassination attempt’
2.10 The Trial
2.11 “That was my farewell to Germany”
2.12 After Emigration: Theoretical Work and Swiss Difficulties (1933 to 1938)
2.13 More Difficulties: Now also the ‘Fight’ with the Berlin Compensation Office, Marriage, Back to Art
3. Rudolfine Menzel (1891–1973) – “Looking backward is death and torpor, looking forward is happiness and the precondition of success”
3.1 Childhood and Youth in Vienna
3.2 Zionism: “We attached great importance to strictness”
3.3 Start and Completion of Studies, Marriage, War
3.4 The Time in Linz: the Sportive and Scientific Occupation with Dogs
3.5 Scientific Successes and Cooperation with the German Reichswehr
3.6 The Political Development in Austria, Contacts to Palestine
3.7 The Departure: “The die was cast. Everything came more quickly than we had believed or suspected”
3.8 Successes in Palestine and Israel: Security and Military Aspects
3.9 Successes in Palestine and Israel: The Domestication of the Canaan Dog
4. Alfred Fabian (1897-1950) – Paranmanjang – “The ups and downs of life”
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Some Biographical Background Information
4.3 “Torment at school, no understanding at home”
4.4 World War I, Captivity and Return to Germany
4.5 “The turmoil of the post-war period”
4.6 “The year 1927 then brought a turnaround”
4.7 The Nazis’ Grip: Arrests, Camps, Release
4.8 His Epilogue: It Goes to Shanghai
4.9 Adding a Few Facts

III. Neither Solidarity nor Justice nor Love
1. Basic Features of a Morality of Recognition
2. Moral Misrecognition
2.1 Non-recognition – Refused solidarity, refused rights
2.2 Misrecognition as a process
3. “When Bad Things Happen to Good People” – About an Extreme Case of Misrecognition

The End: And what Happened Next?
Publications Resulting from the Harvard University Scientific Prize
Competition – a Selection
References
Index