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A CONTROVERSIAL GERMAN BESTSELLER: Desintegriert Euch is a controversial bestseller in native Germany examining the actuality of modern Jewish life in the post-migrant country. A ROUSING, POLEMIC BOOK OF THE CURRENT SOCIAL DEBATE: Czollek impressively reveals that Germany has not taken this reappraisal as seriously as many would like to believe, sparking an important debate in German-speaking countries and beyond on identity, discrimination and self-determination. FINALIST FOR THE 2020 BAVARIAN BOOK AWARD: Desintegriert Euch was a finalist in the 2020 Bavarian Book Award in Nonfiction.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
A CONTROVERSIAL GERMAN BESTSELLER: Desintegriert Euch is a controversial bestseller in native Germany examining the actuality of modern Jewish life in the post-migrant country. A ROUSING, POLEMIC BOOK OF THE CURRENT SOCIAL DEBATE: Czollek impressively reveals that Germany has not taken this reappraisal as seriously as many would like to believe, sparking an important debate in German-speaking countries and beyond on identity, discrimination and self-determination. FINALIST FOR THE 2020 BAVARIAN BOOK AWARD: Desintegriert Euch was a finalist in the 2020 Bavarian Book Award in Nonfiction. SHARP-TONGUED, PROVOCATIVE, AND UNAPOLOGETIC: In a sharp and refreshing way, Czollek adds to the voices of those authors who have been articulating their displeasure with the celebrated German culture of remembrance for years.
Autorenporträt
Max Czollek is a poet, publicist, and political scientist. He received his doctorate from the Center for Research on Anti-Semitism at the Technische Universität Berlin and is particularly well known for his theatrical and essayistic work surrounding memory culture, integration, and Jewish identity in post-war Germany. Jon Cho-Polizzi is an educator, activist, and freelance literary translator. Beginning in Fall 2022, he will be a Collegiate Postdoctoral Fellow and Assistant Professor of German at the University of Michigan. Jon received his PhD from UC Berkeley in German and Medieval Studies after studying Translation, History, and Literature in Heidelberg and Santa Cruz. He lives and works between Ann Arbor, Northern California, and Berlin.