Box 5
Contains 170 Results:
Letter. Jana Starek to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2006 October 17
Jana Starek (b. 1954) currently works at the Vienna Wiesenthal Institute for Holocaust Studies. Starek also co-founded and worked for the Internaitonal Helsinki Federation for Human Rights.
Correspondence. Jiri Starek, Turin (Italy), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1974
Correspondence. Barbara Staudacher, Stuttgart (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1997-1998
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Zürich, 1974
The letters are addressed to Anna Peturnig, a pseudonym Markstein used while translating Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipelago.
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Zürich, 1975-1976
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1977
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1978-1980
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1983
Correspondence. Alexander Steininger, Aachen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1985-1997
Letters. Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, to Hilde Stinemann, Zürich, 1991 July 21
Correspondence. Assia Stöckl with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2003-2006
Correspondence. Klara Strada with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1980-1987
Letters. Marlene Schneebacher to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1990
Enclosure consists of an invitation to the wedding of Marlene Schneebacher and Michael J. Hurley in Graz, Austria.
Correspondence. Jürgen Schopp with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2000
Jürgen Schopp (b. 1946) is a Finnish language and translation scholar.
Correspondence. Christel Schreer-Gailing, Darmstadt (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1972-1973
Correspondence. Hanna Schubert, Tuttlingen (Germany), with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, circa 1978
Letters. Angelika Schwarz, Frankfurt, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1994 January 20
Enclosure consists of an invitation to the wedding of Marlene Schneebacher and Michael J. Hurley in Graz, Austria.
Letters. Marina Schwartz to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1976-1977
Marina Schwartz is a friend and colleague of Markstein's, who was involved in translating Russian to English.
Correspondence. Marina Schwartz with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1978-1979
Letters. Marina Schwartz to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1980-1989
Correspondence. Marina Schwartz with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1992
Correspondence. Marina Schwartz with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1993-1994
Correspondence. K.D. Seemann, Berlin, with Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1985
Klaus Dieter Seeman is a professor of Russian literature at the Free U. of Berlin.
Letters. Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, to Dmitri Segal, Jerusalem, 1977-1978
Dmitri Segal is a professor of Russian and Slavic Studies at the Hebrew U. in Jerusalem.
Letter. Thomas Seifrid, Los Angeles, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1989 October 10
Thomas Seifrid is a professor of Slavic languages and literatures at the U. of Southern California.
Letter. Dan Seligman, Seattle (WA), to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 2006 October 18
Letter. Irene Senenger to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1998 January 22
Letter. Bernhard Seyr, Vienna, to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1992 July 2
Letter. Angelina Shchekin-Krotova to Elisabeth Markstein, Vienna, 1967 December 26
Angelina Vasilevna Shchekin-Krotova (1910-1992) was the widow of the Russian artist Robert Falk (1886-1958); the enclosure deals with various projects relating to Falk.