German and Austrian Émigré musical culture in the British internment camps of World War II : composer Hans Gál, Huyton Suite and the camp revue What a Life!
During the bombardment of Britain in World War II, the British government adopted a policy of mass internment of foreign nationals originating from ''enemy'' states (namely Germany, Austria and Italy). Using the experiences of interned composer Hans Gál and the genesis of his Huy...
Main Author: | Snizek, Suzanne |
---|---|
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of British Columbia
2011
|
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33917 |
Similar Items
-
German and Austrian Émigré musical culture in the British internment camps of World War II : composer Hans Gál, Huyton Suite and the camp revue What a Life!
by: Snizek, Suzanne
Published: (2011) -
German and Austrian Émigré musical culture in the British internment camps of World War II : composer Hans Gál, Huyton Suite and the camp revue What a Life!
by: Snizek, Suzanne
Published: (2011) -
EMIGRATION, INNER EMIGRATION, EXILE, CAMP: THE COMMON AND THE SPECIFIC IN THE WRITER’S SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS
by: Barkovskaya Nina Vladimirovna
Published: (2019-02-01) -
The role of music, performing artists and composers in German-controlled concentration camps and ghettos during Word War II
by: Toerien, Willem Andre
Published: (2013) -
Russian War Prisoners of the First World War in German Camps
by: Gulzhaukhar Kokebayeva, et al.
Published: (2014-09-01)