Articles By Lesley Chamberlain
July/August 2010
'Perhaps tying works of art to their originating topography is vulgar and needs to be kept discreet. But history needs Nabokov. During the artistically formative years, he lived here in the 1920s and 1930s, he peerlessly described how Berlin's 300,000 Russian émigrés endured life after the Bolshevik Revolution.'
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October 2009
For more than 50 years Martin Heidegger worked up in the mountain resort of Todtnauberg, at a simple desk looking east. It is not surprising that the philosopher chose to dwell in a world that has changed very little since his day.
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February 2009
‘The post-1989 temptation in Prague has been two-fold. The first has been to legislate the totalitarian past out of existence, the second has been to copy the liberal West blindly at a lag of 20 years’
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About Lesley Chamberlain
Lesley Chamberlain is a journalist, travel writer, and historian of Russian and German culture. She is the author of The Philosophy Steamer: Lenin and the Exile of the Intelligentsia.
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