Enzensberger had studied English at
Moscow University, and with permission to live abroad, was able to travel often between London and Moscow. In London and Cambridge in the 1970s, she became known for her illumination of works of avant-garde Russian culture, including film (
Dziga Vertov) and poetry (
Osip Brik), especially through her commentaries and translations for the periodical
Screen. Befriended by many in England sympathetic to progressive political and cultural causes, her parties were celebrated – including in Cambridge, where she was elected to a Fellowship at
King's College, Cambridge (1972–76). Friendships were extended and developed with English scholars and poets and with Russian emigres. She credited meeting Masha to developing a fuller understanding of the poems of
Maria Tsvetaeva. There are vivid recollections of her Cambridge parties "
...There she entertained lavishly, striking a glass to command Russian style toasts from sheepish Cambridge dons..." ==Works and death==