
Artistic Collaboration, Exile, and Brecht
A New Intellectual History, 1900-1950
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Product details:
- Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- Date of Publication 13 November 2025
- Number of Volumes Hardback
- ISBN 9781350433588
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages300 pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Language English
- Illustrations 8 bw illus 700
Categories
Long description:
An illuminating history of the intimate group around Bertolt Brecht which produced some of the most important works of 20th-century drama, literature, and theory while in exile from Nazi Germany.
Bertolt Brecht is recognized as one of the great literary figures of the 20th century. But was he a charismatic genius or an exploitative plagiarizer, and how did his commitment to socialism inform his art? For decades, opinions on Brecht have been polarized by these questions.
Building on new archival research and previously unconsidered sources, Katherine Hollander offers a fresh historical perspective by de-centering Brecht and contextualizing him within a small group of peers. This book investigates how the members of this group understood their collaborative work in the context of their commitments to fighting fascism and building socialism. It illuminates a community that coalesced first in Vienna and Berlin and intensified as it moved into exile in Denmark after 1933. Beginning not with Brecht but with the actor Helene Weigel and her mentor, the Danish feminist Karin Michaï¿1⁄2lis, the book takes seriously the women of the group and their ideas about socialism, gender, collaboration, and art.
By the time the group shifted its center to Denmark, it included dramaturg and editor Margarete Steffin and social philosopher Walter Benjamin, and saw an increase in productivity and interdependence. Through careful study of writings and correspondence, this book reveals not just how the group worked but how they understood that work as an embodiment of their evolving ideas about socialism, antifascism, and collectivity. It suggests the understudied ways that collaboration has contributed to intellectual history, dissolving the false binary around Brecht and making way for new understandings of co-creation.
Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. A Swan In Disguise: Vienna, 1900-1917
Chapter 2. The Weimar Constellation: Berlin, 1900-1933
Chapter 3. Green Islands: Experiments in Exile, 1908-1933
Chapter 4. A Home at the End of the World: Svendborg, 1933-1936
Chapter 5. Producing Something with the Others' Talents: Svendborg, 1936-1938
Chapter 6. Four Doors to Escape Through: Flight and Loss, 1938-1941
Chapter 7. More Light: Hollywood and Berlin, 1941-1950
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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