Read The Bitter Taste of Victory Online
Authors: Lara Feigel
attends Nuremberg trial
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attends PEN conference in Zurich
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branded a communist by press in Germany and by FBI
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castigates Germans and their conquerors
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coins the phrase ‘too biddle and too late’
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death of
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disillusioned with state of Germany
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family background
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furious at Göring’s suicide
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gives controversial speech on German situation
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gives a lecture on Klaus’s death and the death of other intellectuals
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health of
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liaison with Bruno Walter
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little influence of
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in Los Angeles
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marries Auden
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marries Gründgens
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mid-life sadness
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moves to Switzerland
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outraged about Furtwängler
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outraged about Göring’s charm at the Trial
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political stance
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re-visits Germany regularly in 1950s
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reaction to being back in Germany
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reaction to death of Klaus
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relationship with her brother Klaus
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relationship with her father
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sexual orientation
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shocked at loss of denazification programme
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spends incestuous Christmas in Zurich
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translates her brother’s essay on European intellectuals
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urges her readers to remain hard-hearted in judging Germans
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views become mainstream
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views on Germany
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visits Nazi prisoners in Mondorf-les-Bains
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as a war correspondent
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writes article dismissing the term ‘inner emigration’
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Mann, Golo
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Mann, Katia Pringsheim
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acknowledges his own spiritual statelessness
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addicted to drugs
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adrift in postwar warld
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as assistant to Roberto Rossellini in Rome
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bemoans his loss of fluency in writing
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comment on the atomic bomb
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comment on Berlin
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comment on
Der Monat
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commitment to bohemianism
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committed to vision of united Europe
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concerned about his role in the family and in postwar Europe
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difficult relationship with Harold
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disillusioned with state of Germany
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enlisted in Allied army
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as figurehead of West German rebels
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final weeks and death
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invited to work in Amsterdam
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lectures in Germany, Netherland, Switzerland and Czechoslovakia
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little influence of
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as Mephistopheles
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moves into his own house
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political views
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relationship with Gründgens
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relationship with his father
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relationship with his sister Erika
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returns to his family in Los Angeles
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saddened at state of Germany and guilt of the people
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sexual orientation
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spends Christmas in Zurich
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suicidal death-wish
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urges his readers to remain hard-hearted in judging Germans
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visits his old home in Munich
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warns of the dangers of fascism
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wishes to return to Germany
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wonders if one can have two mother languages
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writes article on his lecture experiences
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‘An American Soldier Revisiting his Former Homeland’
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Anja and Esther
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‘Art and Politics’
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‘Berlin’s Darling’
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The Last Day
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Mephisto
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‘The Ordeal of European Intellectuals’
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The Turning Point
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Mann, Thomas
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ambivalence towards US
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attempts to call into existenc a unified
Kulturnation
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attends PEN conference in Zurich
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berates his countrymen
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books distributed around the world
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books purged from libraries
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builds his own house with views of ocean and garden
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comments on Russia, Palestine and Czechoslovakia
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debate with German writers who had remained in Germany
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decides to donate his East German prize to the church
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delivers speech at peace conference in LA (1948)
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denounced in Congress
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description of
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disappointment and disillusion with the state of Germany
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