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Elisabeth Mann Borgese (1918–2002)

Author of Drama of the Oceans

27+ Works 132 Members 0 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

(yid) VIAF:129903

(mao) VIAF:PND:119141612

(ger) VIAF:129903

Works by Elisabeth Mann Borgese

Associated Works

Star of Stars (1968) — Contributor — 106 copies
Star Science Fiction Stories No. 6 (1959) — Contributor — 85 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Mann Borgese, Elisabeth
Legal name
Mann Borgese, Elisabeth Veronika
Other names
Mann, Elisabeth
Birthdate
1918-04-24
Date of death
2002-02-08
Burial location
Friedhof Kilchberg, Zürich, Switzerland
Gender
female
Nationality
Germany
USA
Czechoslovakia
Canada
Birthplace
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Place of death
St Moritz, Switzerland
Places of residence
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Zürich, Switzerland
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Florence, Italy
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Education
Zürich Conservatory
Occupations
pianist
Professor
maritime law expert
Relationships
Borgese, Giuseppe Antonio (husband)
Mann, Thomas (father)
Mann, Erika (sister)
Mann, Klaus (brother)
Mann, Heinrich (uncle)
Mann, Golo (brother) (show all 11)
Mann, Katia (mother)
Auden, W.H. (brother-in-law)
Dohm, Hedwig (great-grandmother)
Mann, Michael (brother)
Mann Borghese, Elisabeth (sister)
Organizations
Club of Rome
International Ocean Institute
Awards and honors
Order of Canada (1988)
Short biography
Elisabeth Mann Borgese was born in Munich, Germany, the youngest daughter of writer Thomas Mann and his wife Katia Mann. Her paternal uncle Heinrich Mann also was a novelist. After the Nazis rose to power in 1933, the Mann family left Germany, moving first to Switzerland. Elisabeth studied the piano and cello at the Conservatory of Music in Zurich. In 1938, the family emigrated to the USA. The following year, she married Giuseppe Antonio Borgese, an anti-fascist Italian writer and professor of literature who was 36 years her senior, with whom she had two daughters. She worked as an editor and researcher in Chicago, and served as a senior fellow at the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, California, before joining the faculty at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1979. She began as a political science professor and later became an adjunct law professor. During these years, she was establishing herself as an international expert on the oceans, maritime law, and protection of the environment. She initiated and organized the first conference on the law of the sea on Malta in 1970, the first of 30 such meetings worldwide, which brought about the United Nations Law of the Seas Treaty in 1982. She founded the International Oceans Institute in the 1970s. She continued to teach until her 80s.
Disambiguation notice
VIAF:129903

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Statistics

Works
27
Also by
4
Members
132
Popularity
#153,555
Rating
3.9
ISBNs
27
Languages
2

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