Christopher Isherwood’s Berlin years | Literaturhaus Berlin

Image of the Literaturhaus Berlin, surrounded by large trees was built in 1889-90 with light orange bricks, it features a bay window on the left (piossibly sandstone), with green roller shutters

Looking back on his time in Berlin, Christopher Isherwood memorably wrote that, to his young self, ›Berlin meant Boys‹. Sexual curiosity was certainly part of what drove the English novelist to Berlin. But to Isherwood, Berlin also meant political awakening, cinema, cabaret, professional contacts, friendships, and much more. Isherwood’s experiences in Berlin in the early 1930s completely changed his personal and professional life. He evoked some of them in Mr Norris changes Trains (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939), two novels that have created a mythic image of interwar Berlin. Years later, Isherwood destroyed the diary he kept in Berlin. Why? What do we really know about Isherwood’s time in Berlin?

Questions like these will be discussed by the two Isherwood experts Katherine Bucknell and Stefano Evangelista on our digital stage. Katherine Bucknell is the editor of Isherwood’s diaries. She is currently writing a new biography of Christopher Isherwood. Stefano Evangelista is associate professor of English literature at Trinity College Oxford and co-curator of the exhibition »Happy in Berlin?«.

Date: 30 July 2021
Time: 18:00 (BST time zone) | 19:00 (CEST time zone)
Format: 'Live on tape'
Admission: Free to watch on the Literaturhaus YouTube-Channel

 

Event listing retrieved on 25/6/21 from original event announcement on the Literaturhaus Berlin webpage.

 

You can read more about Stefano Evagelista's project on the TORCH KE Fellowship page.