Collections : [German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections]

German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections

German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections

Personal and professional papers of German-speaking Émigré in the social sciences, humanities, and the arts and the organizations which assisted those who fled the Nazi regime.
In recognition of the serious scholarly interest in the mass migration of German speaking exiles from the Nazi regime, a German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collection was established in 1976 at the University at Albany, State University of New York. This growing collection has been developed since the 1970s through the efforts of the University Libraries and Professor John M. Spalek of the University's Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literature Department

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Online Content Online Content Remove constraint Online Content: Online Content Collecting Area German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections Remove constraint Collecting Area: German and Jewish Intellectual Émigré Collections

Search Results

Folder
Online

This series contains primarily correspondence dealing with Hula's publications and includes correspondence with publishers, newspapers and periodicals, as well as colleagues. Individuals represented in the correspondence include colleagues at the New School for Social Research, such as Arnold Brecht, Eduard Heimann, Hans Simons and Hans Staudinger, as well as legal scholars and contemporaries such as Leo Gross, Hans Kelsen, Hans J. Morgenthau, Kurt Riezler, and Kurt von Fritz.

Folder
Online

The largest part of the correspondence consists of correspondence with fellow economists, including a substantial amount with former Austrian émigrés Friedrich A. von Hayek, Gottfried Haberler, Fritz Machlup and Oscar Morgenstern. Also included among the correspondents are fellow economists from the Federal Reserve Board and other noted economists, such as: Frits J. de Jong, Alexander Gerschenkron, Ervin P. Hexner, Charles P. Kindleberger, Fred H. Klopstock, Miroslav Kriz, Arthur W. Marget, François Perroux, Walter S. Salant, Joseph Schumpeter, Wendell E. Thorne, Henry C. Wallich, C. Raymond Whittlesey, and Herbert T. Zassenhaus.