Creator Bio
Jakob Wasserman
1873–1934
Although now largely forgotten, Bavarian-born Jakob Wasserman was one of the most widely read European novelists of the first third of the twentieth century. His work frequently addressed Jewish themes, especially the failure of German and Austrian Jews to earn the unqualified respect of their neighbors, and he was always bitter that his novels were more respected in France, Britain, and the United States than they were in his native country. Although a champion of social justice, he often unthinkingly incorporated stereotypes of Jews in his writing, especially in his memoir.
Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator
Primary Source
My Life as German and Jew
I was born and raised in Fuerth, a predominantly Protestant manufacturing city of Middle Franconia, with a large Jewish community consisting principally of artisans and tradesmen. The Jews formed…
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The Dark Pilgrimage
In the year 1885, a few days after the Feast of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, it began to rain in the plains surrounding the rivers Rednitz and Pegnitz and continued to do so almost…