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Paris Nights

Joseph Roth

Essays and Letters Edited by Jan Bürger

From 1925 until his death, Paris was the most influential city in Joseph Roth’s life next to Vienna. It’s where he honed his unmistakable style; it’s where he spent the last one and a half decades of his short life after France became his land of exile; and it’s where he was buried on May 30, 1939.

When he came to the French capital on assignment for the Frankfurter Zeitung newspaper, it felt like a revelation to him. He wrote, “Whoever has not been here is only half a human, and no European.” In Paris, Roth felt suddenly freed from his crisis of meaning and the city challenged him in its modernity and overwhelming diversity. The immediate result was a series of letters and essays that established Roth as a radical chronicler of the City of Light and one of the most innovative and insightful journalists of his generation. Nevertheless, in 1926, the Frankfurter Zeitung refused him the post of permanent correspondent in France. So, Roth, who wrote his articles and essays with the same level of sophistication as his novels, redirected his talents once again. Only one thing would stay the same: from then on, Paris remained the most important city of his itinerate life in hotels, bars, and bistros. This collection contains some previously unpublished letters and a richly detailed epilogue that retraces Roth’s footsteps through the city and provides context for his works during this period.

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Published by C.H.Beck , ISBN: 9783406726316

Main content page count: 144 Pages

ISBN: 9783406726316