General Info | TEI
Name | Bartlett, Vernon |
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Alternative Names | |
ID | 360 |
Gender | male |
Lifespan | 1894-04-30 - 1983-01-18 |
Professions | journalist (Q1930187), foreign correspondent, British |
Collection(s) |
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Uri(s) |
https://id.acdh.oeaw.ac.at/ica/persons/1_20 |
Notes | As a foreign observer of the Austrian Civil War, Bartlett did not join the majority of British journalists in condemning the political acts of the leaders of the conservative and clerical party in Austria. In his autobiographical reminiscences contained in This Is My Life, first published in 1937, Bartlett expressed his sympathy for their dilemma, describing it as desperate. Unlike others, he also did not condemn Chancellor Dollfuss. Following the assassination of the Chancellor in July 1934, he expressed his respect for the “cheerful, well-meaning, hard-working little man” (224), whose funeral he attended and covered in a broadcast to England. In his role as an early broadcaster Bartlett thus mediated an image of the situation in Austria in 1934 which differed from that furnished by most Anglophone journalists.(Zacharasiewicz, Transatlantic Networks, p. 186) |
Relations
Institution
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Institution |
---|---|---|---|
— | — | related >> worked for/at | League of Nations |
1934 | — | related >> worked for/at >> was a foreign correspondent in Central Europe for | News Chronicle (London) |
Person
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Person |
---|---|---|---|
— | — | friendship with | Gunther, John |
1932 | — | had a meeting with | Čermak, Antonin |
Place
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Place |
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1894-04-30 | — | Place of Birth | Westbury, Wiltshire |
Work
Start | End | Other relation type | Related Work |
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1937 | — | related >> wrote >> author of | This is My Life |