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A Woman Named Edith

Emigre, Photographer and Secret Agent – The Extraordinary Life of Edith Tudor Hart

Daria Santini

$51.95

Hardback

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English
Yale University
07 May 2026
A major new biography of Edith Tudor Hart, the photographer and Soviet agent who recruited Kim Philby

Edith Tudor Hart has long evaded biographers. A Jewish-Austrian exile in 1930s London, she was a talented professional photographer, anti-fascist activist—and Soviet secret agent.

Daria Santini provides the first full biography of this elusive figure. She traces Tudor Hart's life from her early years in the socialist intellectual circles of Vienna through her training at the Bauhaus to her work as a Soviet agent in Britain. Tudor Hart played a vital role in the Cambridge Spies network, including recruiting Kim Philby. Throughout her life, Tudor Hart was deeply committed to the ideals of communism. But despite being watched by the British Secret Service for decades, she was never caught and never confessed.

In this moving account, Santini pieces together the story of Edith's life, revealing a woman of great energy, determination, and creativity.
By:  
Imprint:   Yale University
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 152mm, 
ISBN:   9780300276398
ISBN 10:   0300276397
Pages:   384
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Daria Santini is an independent scholar and writer. She was lecturer in German language and literature at the University of Oxford for fifteen years and is the author of The Exiles: Actors, Artists and Writers Who Fled the Nazis for London.

Reviews for A Woman Named Edith: Emigre, Photographer and Secret Agent – The Extraordinary Life of Edith Tudor Hart

“Impressive. . . . Edith Tudor Hart’s story has never been told in such depth and with such sensitivity.”—Tom Buchanan, University of Oxford “An Austrian émigré to Britain, Edith Tudor Hart was one of the most significant spies and agent-runners in history. Yet she was also a much admired photographer, devoted mother and lover to a string of famous men. In this meticulously researched and sympathetic book, Edith finally gets the biography she deserves.”—Richard Cockett, author of Vienna “A brilliant biography. . . . At last Edith Tudor Hart emerges from the shadows to take her rightful place in the history of espionage. Daria Santini combines the latest revelations from MI5 files with unique access to photo archives.”—Stewart Purvis, coauthor of Guy Burgess: The Spy Who Knew Everyone “Beautifully researched and written. . . . Edith Tudor Hart’s life has been obscured behind her role as ‘the grandmother’ of the Cambridge Five, but she was so much more than that. Santini reveals a compassionate, creative woman, whose life was shaped by the seismic political and social changes in Europe.”—Helen Fry, author of Women in Intelligence


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