Marc Weitzmann
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Marc Weitzmann (born 1959) is a French journalist and novelist. The former editor-in-chief of ''
Les Inrockuptibles ''Les Inrockuptibles'' () is a French cultural magazine. Started as a monthly magazine in 1986, it became weekly in 1995. Now it is a monthly again, since 2021. In the beginning, rock music was the magazine's primary focus, though every issue in ...
'', he hosts a weekly radio-show, Signe des Temps (Signs of the Times) on the public radio
France Culture France Culture is a French public radio channel and part of Radio France. Its programming encompasses a wide variety of features on historical, philosophical, sociopolitical, and scientific themes (including debates, discussions, and documentari ...
, the French NPR, and is a regular contributor to
Le Monde ''Le Monde'' (; ) is a French daily afternoon newspaper. It is the main publication of Le Monde Group and reported an average circulation of 323,039 copies per issue in 2009, about 40,000 of which were sold abroad. It has had its own website si ...
,
Le Point ''Le Point'' () is a French weekly political and news magazine published in Paris. History and profile ''Le Point'' was founded in September 1972 by a group of journalists who had, one year earlier, left the editorial team of '' L'Express'', w ...
, Le Magazine Littéraire, and the US news site Tablet Magazine. He is the author of 12 books.


Early life

Marc Weitzmann was born in 1959 in Paris. His family is of Jewish Alsatian, Ukrainian and Polish descent. He grew up in
Reims Reims ( , , ; also spelled Rheims in English) is the most populous city in the French department of Marne, and the 12th most populous city in France. The city lies northeast of Paris on the Vesle river, a tributary of the Aisne. Founded by ...
and
Besançon Besançon (, , , ; archaic german: Bisanz; la, Vesontio) is the prefecture of the department of Doubs in the region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté. The city is located in Eastern France, close to the Jura Mountains and the border with Switzerl ...
, where his father worked as a theatre actor. His parents were
Communists Communism (from Latin la, communis, lit=common, universal, label=none) is a far-left sociopolitical, philosophical, and economic ideology and current within the socialist movement whose goal is the establishment of a communist society, a so ...
. One of his cousins is the writer
Serge Doubrovsky Julien Serge Doubrovsky (22 May 1928, Paris – 23 March 2017, Boulogne-Billancourt) was a French writer and 1989 Prix Médicis winner for '' Le Livre brisé''. He is also a critical theorist, and coined the term "autofiction" in the drafts for h ...
.


Career

Weitzmann began a career as a journalist in the early 80's. He became literary editor of ''Les Inrockuptibles'' in 1995, and eventually its editor-in-chief. More recently, he has written about antisemitism in France in ''
Tablet Tablet may refer to: Medicine * Tablet (pharmacy), a mixture of pharmacological substances pressed into a small cake or bar, colloquially called a "pill" Computing * Tablet computer, a mobile computer that is primarily operated by touching the s ...
''. Weitzmann is the author of 12 books, including seven novels. His books deal with father and son relationship , as well as topics like globalization, terrorism, identity politics and social atomization. His second novel, ''Chaos'', was an autofiction about his cousin Serge Doubrovsky. Between 2004 and 2009 he lived between Paris and New York. In 2009, Weitzmann signed a petition in support of film director
Roman Polanski Raymond Roman Thierry Polański , group=lower-alpha, name=note_a (né Liebling; 18 August 1933) is a French-Polish film director, producer, screenwriter, and actor. He is the recipient of numerous accolades, including an Academy Award, two ...
, calling for his release after Polanski was arrested in Switzerland in relation to his 1977 sexual abuse case During the summer 2014, Weitzmann wrote for Tablet Magazine "France's Toxic Hate", a series of reporting on the rise of antisemitism in his country that won the Berman Prize for literary Journalism in London in February 2015. in January 2015, at Philip Roth's suggestion, Weitzmann began a book based on those reportings. But the beginning of the terror wave that same months changed the scope of the initial project to a major work in two languages that consumed four years of his life. The French version of the book, "Un temps pour Haïr" was published in October 2018 in France. It has won the "Prix du livre politique étudiant-France Culture" 2019, the Foundation Bernheim Prize 2019 in the category Letters, and was short listed for the Renaudot and Femina prizes. The US version, "Hate", was released March 12, 2019 by Houghton-Mifflin. In the Wall Street Journal, James Kirchick described it as "an excellent and chilling report-cum-memoir about one of the most unsettling phenomena in contemporary Europe” and Roger Cohen in the NYTBR as "an often illuminating intensity as it grapples with an unresolved French and European quandary." The book is a New York Times Book Review Editor's choice. In the aftermath of the Christchurch massacre, April '19, Marc Weitzmann published an article in Foreign Affairs called "The Global Language of Hate is French" tracing the intellectual French influences for the killer's manifesto.


Works


Novels

* * * * * * *


Essays

* * * *Weitzmann, Marc (2018). ''Un temps pour haïr'', Paris: Grasset. Translated in English under the title ''Hate''.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Weitzmann, Marc Living people 1959 births French people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent French people of Polish-Jewish descent Writers from Paris French male journalists French male novelists 20th-century French journalists 21st-century French journalists 20th-century French novelists 21st-century French novelists 20th-century French male writers 21st-century French male writers