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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jurek_BeckerJurek Becker - Wikipedia

    Jurek Becker ( German: [ˈjuː.ʁɛk ˈbɛ.kɐ] ⓘ, probably 30 September 1937 – 14 March 1997) was a Polish-born German writer, screenwriter and East German dissident. His most famous novel is Jacob the Liar, which has been made into two films.

  2. How I Became a German: Jurek Becker's Life in Five Worlds – GHI Washington. About Us. The German Historical Institute Washington is a center for advanced historical research. Working with junior and senior scholars around the world, the GHI facilitates dialogue and collaboration across national and disciplinary boundaries. Read on. Our Mission.

  3. A survivor of the Shoah-his mother died in a Nazi death camp-and witness to the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe, Becker endured most of the trials that Jews experienced in Europe from the onset of World War II to the end of the Cold War.

  4. Mar 24, 2021 · Here I consider how the fiction of Jurek Becker privileges imagination and play in transit camps and ghettos through childhood perspectives in “dialogue” with adult characters and narrators. Becker was born to Channa and Max Bekker in Łódź in 1937, with the given name of Jerzy.

    • Delene Case White
    • 2021
  5. Jakob the Liar is a 1999 American-made Holocaust film directed by Peter Kassovitz, produced by Steven Haft and Marsha Garces Williams. It is written by Kassovitz and Didier Decoin based on the 1969 German novel Jacob the Liar, by Jewish author Jurek Becker. The film stars Robin Williams, Alan Arkin, Liev Schreiber, Hannah Taylor-Gordon and Bob ...

  6. Oct 8, 2018 · Becker's novel, published in 1969, is unquestionably one of the most impressive texts that grapples with the years between 1933 and 1945. The book is at once great literature and a literary...

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  8. Overview. Jurek Becker. (1937—1997) Quick Reference. (Łódź, Poland, 1937–1997), lived with his parents in the Jewish quarter, and at the age of five was sent to the concentration camp of Ravensbrück, later to Sachsenhausen. During these ... From: Becker, Jurek in The Oxford Companion to German Literature » Subjects: Literature.

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