E-book
Digital Version
Download | Copy/paste | Printing

Gather what you can and flee : Jewish intellectual emigration from Fascist Italy

2014 - CPL - Centro Primo Levi

74 pages

  • Includes bibliographical references (pages 59-74).
  • The Jewish emigration provoked by fascist persecution was a significant phenomenon in the history of 20th century's Italy. It resulted in, among other things, a “brain drain” that negatively and deeply impacted the scientific development and the whole of Italian culture in the post-war years. In spite of this, for a long time this topic has been somewhat neglected in Italian historical studies, the focus being primarily on migration motivated by economic reasons or political dissent. Excluding some references in works on political opposition abroad the so-called fuoruscitismo, in papers about particular destinations of Jewish emigration or in memoirs, the first paper that provides an overview on this matter is an essay by Mario Toscano, first published in 1988 and republished in 2003.
  • After 1988, analysis of the consequences of persecution brought about a renewal of interest in the theme of emigration, in particular in the areas of high-culture and the professions. References and useful data concerning the migratory flow of Jews from Italy can be found in general works about the persecution; in works regarding measures against foreign Jews who sought refuge in Italy; in books and articles concerning the expulsion of teachers from various universities and their difficult or unsuccessful reintegration after 1945.
  • In Capristo's essay a synthesis is presented of themes regarding the Italian Jewish emigration after 1938: the nature of the persecution; the approximate dimensions, given the absence of accurate documentation, as well as the qualitative description of this migration; and the cultural and scientific consequences for Italy and for the countries where they arrived, and note made of the activities of some of the émigrés, particularly with regard to those who settled in the United States. [Publisher's text]
  • Online only available