Summary
A harrowing account of the profoundly consequential decisions American universities made about refugee scholars from Nazi-dominated Europe. The United States' role in saving Europe's intellectual elite from the Nazis is often told as a tale of triumph, which in many ways it was. America welcomed Albert Einstein and Enrico Fermi, Hannah Arendt and Herbert Marcuse, Rudolf Carnap and Richard Courant, among hundreds of other physicists, philosophers, mathematicians, historians, chemists, and linguists who transformed the American academy. Yet for every scholar who survived and thrived, many, many more did not. To be hired by an American university, a refugee scholar had to be world-class and well connected, not too old and not too young, not too right and not too left and, most important, not too Jewish. Those who were unable to flee were left to face the horrors of the Holocaust. In this rigorously researched book, Laurel Leff rescues from obscurity scholars who were deemed "not worth saving" and tells the riveting, full story of the hiring decisions universities made during the Nazi era.
Variant and related titles
EBSCOhost eBook collection, Yale University Press.
Other formats
Print version: Leff, Laurel, 1957- Well worth saving. New Haven : Yale University Press, [2019]
Contents
The Nazi University
Rescue efforts
Unsympathetic administrators
World class and well connected
Age, politics, gender, and money
Too Jewish or foreign
State Department barriers
An international crisis
More need, less help
A last chance in France
Security fears
Final appeals.