- Emil Ludwig
Emil Ludwig (1881 – 1948) was a German
author , known for his biographies.Emil Ludwig (originally named Emil Cohn) was born in
Breslau , now part ofPoland . Ludwig studied law but chose writing as a career. At first he wrote plays and novella, but also worked as a journalist. In 1906, he moved toSwitzerland , but, duringWorld War I , he worked as a foreign correspondent for the "Berliner Tageblatt " inVienna andIstanbul . He became a Swiss citizen in 1932, later emigrating to the United States in 1940. At the end of theSecond World War , he went to Germany as a journalist, and it is to him that we owe the retrieving ofGoethe 's andSchiller 's coffins, which had disappeared fromWeimar in 1943/44. He returned to Switzerland after the war and died in 1948, inMoscia , nearAscona . During the 1920s, he achieved international fame for his popular biographies which combined historical fact and fiction with psychological analysis. After his biography of Goethe was published in 1920, he wrote several similar biographies, including one aboutBismarck (1922–24) and another about Jesus (1928). As Ludwig's biographies were popular outside of Germany and were widely translated, he was one of the fortunate émigrés who had an income while living in the United States. His writings were considered particularly dangerous byGoebbels , who mentioned him in his journal.Emil Ludwig interviewed
Joseph Stalin inMoscow on December 13, 1931. An excerpt from this interview is included in Stalin's book OnLenin . Ludwig describes this interview in his biography of Stalin.The following French editions of Emil Ludwig's books were published in the period 1926–1940: Biographies: Goethe (3 volumes), Napoléon, Bismarck, Trois Titans, Lincoln, "Le Fils de l'Homme", Le Nil (2 volumes). Political works: Guillaume II, Juillet 1914, Versailles, Hindenburg, Roosevelt, Barbares et Musiciens, "La Conquête morale de l'Allemagne", "Entretiens avec Mussolini", 'La Nouvelle Sainte-Alliance".
Biographies of Goethe, Napoleon, Bismarck and Wilhelm Hohenzollern are available in English from G. P. Putnam's Sons (New York and London).
Emil Ludwig was -- and remains --renowned for a popular biography of Napoleon published in English in 1926, just after it was published in Germany in the original German, while Ludwig was still living there. This book is still quite readable today - Ludwig has a rare gift of evoking a vanished era in straightforward plain prose. The book has a rare quality of immediacy, as if what Ludwig writes of were almost current history. "Napoleon" was published by a New York publishing house renowned for titles of intellectual and scholarly interest in its day, Boni and Liveright.
External links
* [http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1931/dec/13.htm Ludwig's interview with Stalin]
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