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Introduction
Benjamin, Walter
Bismarck, Otto v.
Brecht, Bertolt
Celan, Paul
Döblin, Alfred
Fontane, Theodor
Grosz, George
Grünbein, Durs
Heartfield, John
Honigmann, Barbara
Isherwood, Christopher
Johnson, Uwe
Kleist, Heinrich v.
Kollwitz, Käthe
Kracauer, Siegfried
Lang, Fritz
Lasker-Schüler, Else
Liebermann, Max
Liebknecht, Karl
Luxemburg, Rosa
Marc, Franz
Ossietzky, Carl v.
Riefenstahl, Leni
Ruttmann, Walther
Schinkel, Karl Friedrich
Speer, Albert
Tieck, Ludwig
Tucholsky, Kurt
Ury, Lesser
Varnhagen, Rahel
Wenders, Wim
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Isherwood, Christopher
b. Aug. 26, 1904, High Lane, Cheshire, England
d. Jan. 4, 1986, Santa Monica, California, U.S.
byname OF CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM BRADSHAW-ISHERWOOD Anglo-American novelist and
playwright best known for his novels about Berlin in the early 1930s.
After working as a secretary and a private tutor, Isherwood gained a measure of coterie
recognition with his first two novels, All the Conspirators (1928) and The Memorial
(1932). During the 1930s he collaborated with his friend W.H. Auden on three verse
dramas, including The Ascent of F6 (1936). But it had been in 1929 that he found the
theme that was to make him widely known. Between 1929 and 1933 he lived in Berlin,
gaining an outsider's view of the simultaneous decay of the Weimar Republic and the
rise of Nazism. His novels Mr. Norris Changes Trains (1935; The Last of Mr.
Norris) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939), which were later published together as The
Berlin Stories, established his reputation as an important writer and inspired the play I
Am a Camera (1951; film 1955) and the musical Cabaret (1966; film 1972). These
books are detached but humorous studies of dubious characters leading seedy
expatriate lives in the German capital. In 1938 Isherwood published Lions and
Shadows, an amusing and sensitive account of his early life and friendships while a
student at the University of Cambridge.
The coming of World War II saw not merely a change of outlook in Isherwood's
writing but also a permanent change of domicile. He immigrated to the United States in
1939 and settled in southern California, where he taught and wrote for Hollywood
films. He was naturalized in 1946. It was also in 1939 that Isherwood turned to
pacifism and the self-abnegation of Indian Vedanta, becoming a follower of Swami
Prabhavananda. In the following decades, Isherwood produced several works on
Vedanta and translations with Prabhavananda, including one of the Bhagavadgita.
Isherwood's postwar novels continued to demonstrate his personal style of fictional
autobiography. A Single Man (1964), a brief but highly regarded novel, presents a
single day in the life of a lonely, middle-aged homosexual. His avowedly
autobiographical works include a self-revealing memoir of his parents, Kathleen and
Frank (1971); a retrospective biography of himself in the 1930s, Christopher and His
Kind (1977); and a study of his relationship with Prabhavananda and Vedanta, My
Guru and His Disciple (1980).
From 1953 on, Isherwood lived with a companion, Don Bachardy, a painter and
portraitist, and both later became involved in homosexual-rights causes.
Source
"Isherwood, Christopher" Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
<http://www.eb.com:180/bol/topic?eu=43846&sctn=1>
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