The Passport as Home: Comfort in Rootlessness
A Scholar's Quest for Home and Identity
Experience the remarkable story of a Romanian-born, Hungarian-speaking Jewish professor. From Vienna to Columbia and Harvard, he navigates a life marked by rootlessness, seeking comfort and purpose. His journey unfolds against the backdrop of five decades, two continents, and significant political and cultural changes.
As we follow his pursuit of a home, we gain insight into the critical developments of post-1945 Europe and America. Markovits's emigration experiences, first from Romania to Vienna and later from Vienna to New York, shed light on the challenges he faced.
His journey offers a panoramic view of the forces shaping the latter half of the 20th century. Despite America's flaws, he finds it a beacon of academic excellence, intellectual openness, cultural diversity, and religious tolerance--qualities that Europe lacked.
Explore the complexities of identity, culture, and the universal search for belonging in this captivating narrative.
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Become an affiliate"The great Jewish historian Salo Baron defined the "lachrymose school of Jewish historiography," that long litany of suffering and persecution that for many defines Jewish life and history. Andy Markovits's memoir is the anecdote to that school: a sunny, optimistic, and uplifting read. It doesn't gloss over the sadness of post-War Europe, but it shows how that lost world could produce a vital future and how a stateless, rootless person could nonetheless turn that condition into a fulfilled life." https: //www.jewishbookcouncil.org/book/the-passport-as-home-comfort-in-rootlessness
--Martin Green, Jewish Book Council"Perhaps the best that one may hope for sometimes is the richness of a life lived without such a destructive set of emotions, the worth of work that is grounded on logic and evidence, the support of people (as the author generously attests to in this memoir) from whom one can learn and with whom one can share insight and understanding. It is this record and these experiences, perhaps above all, which shine brightest out of this evocative memoir."
--Philip Spencer, Fathom"Markovits says his passport is his home. Yet there is an unmistakable warmth with which he describes the various academic institutions that have welcomed and supported him. He also describes the pleasures of discovering a new form of Jewish identity and learning to express that identity in ways that were unavailable in the Timişoara of his childhood. The 'un-belonging' he values does not seem to be the right description for his adult condition. Nor perhaps is 'rootlessness, ' which suggests the lack of something life-giving and generative. Maybe we should see his story as one of gaining a new grounding in institutions and social bonds that could afford him the very independence and agency--in short, the freedom--he had long prized."--Steven Lukes, Dissent
"Andy Markovits reminds us of all that is best about America. As a Jewish emigre from Central Europe, he embodies its better traditions while rejecting its problematic ones. He layers his past into a rich pastry of multiple and diverse ingredients drawn from his U.S. education, his influential scholarship into European worker politics, his innovative research on and love of sports, his commitment to dog rescues, and his general enthusiasm about the world. We hear both the Grateful Dead and the great operas as the background music to this beautifully written adventure of discovery of people and ideas."
--Margaret Levi"This evocative memoir takes us from boyhood in a multicultural neighborhood in communist Timioara and adolescence in Vienna to the tumult of '1968' at Columbia and thence to the magical margins of Harvard and finally the leafy streets of Ann Arbor, with many more transatlantic crossings and serendipitous chance encounters in between. A comparativist political sociologist unique in his attunement to cultural dynamics both high and low, Andrei Markovits lays unabashed claim to the identity of 'rootless cosmopolitan.' The book pays moving tribute to remarkable mentors, and captures with special sensitivity the distinctive perspectives of those extraordinary interlinked cohorts of intellectuals hailing from Central Europe who were either survivors themselves or had lost--as Markovits has--entire branches of family trees to the maws of Auschwitz. Most powerful, however, is Markovits' emphatic, infectiously joyous argument for the values of open-heartedness, empathy, curiosity, and compassion."
--Dagmar Herzog"This book offers a substantial and decisive contribution to the study of the social, political, and cultural developments of the second half of the twentieth century in the vein of similar biographical works such as Tony Judt's Thinking the Twentieth Century (2012) and George L. Mosse's Confronting History: A Memoir (2000). By telling the story of his life Andrei Markovits not only describes under which circumstances he achieved the role of a popular transatlantic intellectual and successful academic, but he gives us a personal yet also analytical insight into the theoretical and emotional complexity of events of both Jewish and universal history after Auschwitz. Additionally, the text provides a fine comparative study of America and Europe by being a fundamentally transatlantic endeavor which sheds light on the cultural similarities and differences between both continents."
--Heiko Beyer