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Brigitte Lohff

    From Berlin to New York
    650 Jahre Universität Wien - Aufbruch ins neue Jahrhundert - 5: Strukturen und Netzwerke
    • 650 Jahre Universität Wien - Aufbruch ins neue Jahrhundert - 5: Strukturen und Netzwerke

      Medizin und Wissenschaft in Wien 1848-1955

      • 904 Seiten
      • 32 Lesestunden

      The analysis of local and international relations of "Vienna Medicine" in the 19th and 20th century and its networks and structures from an important research desiderate. The volume examines these relations with the aim to re-contextualise the history of medical research and practice in Vienna. The contributions of the volume analyse mobility, exchange processes of knowledge, standards and guidelines, social and professional networking, politics, transformations of political and philosophical concepts 'between' centers of medicine, exchange of artistic and medical spheres, and commemoration practices - as transnational phenomena and in their influence on medical research and practice in Vienna.

      650 Jahre Universität Wien - Aufbruch ins neue Jahrhundert - 5: Strukturen und Netzwerke
    • From Berlin to New York

      Life and work of the almost forgotten German-Jewish biochemist Carl Neuberg (1877–1956). With a bibliography of Carl Neuberg's publications by Michael Engel and Brigitte Lohff. Tranlated from the German by Anthony Mellor-Stapelberg

      • 294 Seiten
      • 11 Lesestunden

      With a bibliography of Carl Neuberg’s publications by Michael Engel and Brigitte Lohff. Translated from the German by Anthony Mellor-Stapelberg Carl Neuberg – born in Hanover, Germany, on July 29, 1877; died in New York, USA, on May 30, 1956 – was a celebrated biochemist who contributed greatly to the development of biochemistry from a chemical sub-discipline to a separate subject. As founder and editor of the internationally acknowledged Zeitschrift für Biochemie (today: The FEBS Journal) as well as Director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biochemistry in Berlin, Neuberg played a major role in turning biochemistry into a key discipline of biomedical research in the 20th century. But due to the Nazi persecution and his dismissal from the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Biochemistry in 1934, Neuberg was forced to escape abroad. In this study, Neuberg’s life and work in Germany and his endeavors as a Jewish emigrant in Amercan exile are illustrated to honour his leading role in the history of biochemistry and medicine.

      From Berlin to New York