What I Saw: Reports from Berlin, 1920-1933

Joseph Roth, Michael Bienert, Michael Hofmann (translator)

Publisher: W.W. Norton & Company

Finally available in English, the dizzying world of 1920s Berlin as seen by one of its greatest journalistic eyewitnesses.

In 1920, Joseph Roth, the most renowned German correspondent of his age, arrived in Berlin, the capital of the Weimar Republic. He produced a series of impressionistic and political essays that influenced an entire generation of writers, including Thomas Mann and the young Christopher Isherwood. Translated and collected here for the first time, these pieces record the violent social and political paroxysms that constantly threatened to undo the fragile democracy that was the Weimar Republic. Roth, like no other German writer of his time, ventured beyond Berlin’s official veneer to the heart of the city, chronicling the lives of its forgotten inhabitants: the war cripples, the Jewish immigrants from the Pale, the criminals, the bathhouse denizens, and the nameless dead who filled the morgues. Warning early on of the dangers posed by the Nazis, Roth evoked a landscape of moral bankruptcy and debauched beauty�a memorable portrait of a city and a time of commingled hope and chaos. 35 photographs.

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