De-Integrate!
A Jewish Survival Guide for the 21st Century
-
- $10.99
Publisher Description
A controversial, best-selling polemic in Germany, De-Integrate! is a battle cry against Jewish assimilation into a dominant culture that seeks to paint over the past—and a handbook for minorities on how to embrace their difference and resist rising nationalism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia, and racism.
Max Czollek’s De-Integrate! is a polemical, often humorous examination of Jewish life in contemporary Germany that speaks to the position of minorities the world over. Rooted in sociological theory, the book offers an engaging and approachable critique of Germany’s much-lauded traditions of memory culture and Vergangenheitsbewältigung—its “successful” negotiation of its Nazi past.
Although modern Reunified Germany presents itself as having overcome historical trauma and integrated its now diverse, multicultural society, Czollek argues that this public image is merely a “Theater of Integration”: showcasing those minoritized stories to bolster Germany’s positive self-image, while sidelining the true potential of the country’s radical diversity. Czollek posits that today’s German minorities must embrace their differences and “de-integrate” from mainstream society in order to counter the rise of rightwing nationalism.
On the one hand a stirring look at integration, belonging, and cultural diversity, and on the other a passionate denunciation of bigotry and virulent nationalism, De-Integrate! speaks across cultural, racial, and national divisions and points to a livelier future for all of us.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Poet Czollek makes his English-language debut with an unsparing critique of how Jews and other marginalized groups are viewed in modern Germany. According to Czollek, Jewish people have been relegated to bit roles in what he calls "the Theater of Memory," a set of cultural expectations "staged by and for the Germans" to affirm the country's redemption from WWII and the Holocaust. Refuting Germany's "self-conception as a nation of tolerant and enlightened human beings," Czollek documents implicit and explicit demands for Jews, Muslims, and other minorities to assimilate, and argues that the resurgence of radical neo-Nazi groups has reshaped the country's politics and culture to a degree that ordinary Germans refuse to acknowledge. Both the right and left are driven by a desire for normality, according to Czollek, yet where liberals yearn to leave the past behind, right-wingers seek to return to it. To combat these forces, Czollek issues "a vigorous appeal for more abnormality" and the fostering of an "autonomous Jewish identity" founded in part on the "dazzling potential for irony and revenge to interrupt the well-established relations between Germans and Jews." In Czollek's view, "Jewish life in Germany is Ashkenazi and furious, Mizrahi and queer, impoverished and Reform, narrow-minded and excessive, clean-shaven and Orthodox." Though Czollek's solutions remain somewhat vague, his diagnosis of what ails modern Germany feels spot-on. It's a righteous and uncompromising takedown.