- Source: The Nazi and the Barber
- Edgar Hilsenrath
- Perang Dunia II
- Operasi Barbarossa
- Ryan Gosling
- Ferdinand Porsche
- Republik Kongo
- Uni Soviet pada Perang Dunia II
- Komite Pertahanan Negara
- Pendudukan Jerman oleh Sekutu
- Maxime Weygand
- The Nazi and the Barber
- Christoph Waltz
- Edgar Hilsenrath
- The Great Dictator
- Frances Barber
- Nuremberg (upcoming film)
- The Holocaust in the arts and popular culture
- Jon Minadeo II
- Elves (film)
- Deaths in December 2018
Artikel: The Nazi and the Barber GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi
The Nazi and the Barber (also published as The Nazi Who Lived As a Jew, in the German original Der Nazi & der Friseur) is a 1971 novel by the German-Jewish writer Edgar Hilsenrath. It is a grotesque novel about the Holocaust during the time of Nazism in Germany. The work uses the perpetrator's perspective telling the biography of the SS mass murderer Max Schulz, who after World War II assumes a Jewish identity and finally emigrates to Israel in order to escape prosecution in Germany.
Hilsenrath wrote the novel in German, but because of choosing the perpetrator's perspective he initially had difficulties publishing it in Germany. The book was first published in the U.S. in an English translation by Andrew White in 1971 by Doubleday, one of the largest book publishing companies in the world, and in Germany only in 1977.
Miscellaneous
In 2018, it became public that Christoph Waltz had agreed to play the leading role in a film adaptation of the novel The Nazi and The Barber, and had described the main role, the role of the mass murderer Max Schulz, as "juicy role".
Bibliography
Edgar Hilsenrath, The Nazi and The Barber, Barber Press 2013. (Hardcover ISBN 978-3-9816092-0-2, Paperback ISBN 978-3-9816092-1-9, doi:10.4444/10.2).
External links
Bestselling German-Jewish Author Satirizes the Holocaust, Deutsche Welle, April 9, 2006