
Contents
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International Shanghai International Shanghai
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Chinese Shanghai Chinese Shanghai
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Shanghai, the Sino-Japanese War, and Its Aftermath Shanghai, the Sino-Japanese War, and Its Aftermath
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The Refugee Flood, December 1938 to September 1939 The Refugee Flood, December 1938 to September 1939
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Toward a Life of Culture Toward a Life of Culture
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From Warsaw to Shanghai From Warsaw to Shanghai
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Chinese and Jews and Literary Encounters Chinese and Jews and Literary Encounters
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Cite
Abstract
Adolf Hitler assumed power in January 1933. Only four months later began the persecution of Jewish professionals. It was, no doubt, the loss of position and income that caused a number of physicians, surgeons, dentists, and pharmacists to decide to go to Shanghai. Now not only professionals such as doctors and dentists sought to escape as a result of Germany's policy of forced emigration. Shopkeepers, clerks, salesmen of various kinds, actors, journalists, and writers—everyone who had the price of a train or steamship ticket and who could procure a visa—left. This book focuses on the creative responses of Shanghai and Jewish refugees in the form of prose and poetry, letters, and diary entries that also tell us something about cultural self-perception and perception of the other. These poems and other works should be considered part of exile literature.
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