Intellectual Self-Destruction - (Klartext. Schriften Zu Politik Und Gesellschaft) by Franziska Sittig & Noam Petri (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Dive into the unsettling rise of a radical anti-Western coalition within the sanctuaries of scholarship, where Islamist and far-left ideologies converge.
- About the Author: Franziska Alexandra Sittig completed her master's degree in International Affairs/European Politics at Columbia University in New York City and regularly publishes for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.
- 120 Pages
- Social Science, Jewish Studies
- Series Name: Klartext. Schriften Zu Politik Und Gesellschaft
Description
About the Book
This study is an urgent plea to safeguard our cultural and intellectual heritage from the encroaching shadows of ideological subversion.Book Synopsis
Dive into the unsettling rise of a radical anti-Western coalition within the sanctuaries of scholarship, where Islamist and far-left ideologies converge. What began as a fringe student movement has now permeated elite academic institutions, subtly dictating the narratives in politics and media.
Through meticulous case studies from the US and Germany, this research uncovers the dark underbelly of ideological extremism, institutional betrayal, and the surge in antisemitic violence. It draws chilling parallels to historical academic dalliances with totalitarianism, revealing how today's universities are legitimizing Islamism and radical leftist thought. This study is a clarion call, exposing how Western academia is at a tipping point, with Europe on the brink of following America's path of radicalization. It's an urgent plea to safeguard our cultural and intellectual heritage from the encroaching shadows of ideological subversion.
Review Quotes
A bold and urgent exposé of the ideological forces threatening Western academia and civilization itself. Written by two students--one in the U.S. and one in Germany--, this book uncovers the alarming rise of what they identify as the 'woke-Islamist' alliance, which is eroding free thought, legitimizing extremism, and undermining the very foundations of Western values. Combining first-hand experiences with sharp analysis, the authors issue a compelling wake-up call: The West must confront this growing intellectual and cultural crisis before it is too late.--Mitchell Silber, Executive director of the Community Security Initiative, Member of the Dean's Advisory Board at SIPA, Member of the Council on Foreign Relations.
By analyzing current student protests and the political undercurrents that shape it, Sittig and Petri tackle one of the thorniest issues in current affairs. They do so with a remarkable combination of clarity, moral courage, and academic rigor. In particular, their work sheds light on the ideological and operational interactions between Islamist and hyper-progressive politics, a phenomenon that goes well beyond college campuses and that has been the subject of ample debates in intellectual, political and security circles at the highest levels throughout Europe. The result is a groundbreaking piece of academic work that deserves broad attention.--Lorenzo Vidino, Program Director of Extremism, George Washington University
About the Author
Franziska Alexandra Sittig completed her master's degree in International Affairs/European Politics at Columbia University in New York City and regularly publishes for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. She is a Collegiate Associate at the Manhattan Institute in New York and a Research Intern at United Against Nuclear Iran. In 2016, she won the ZEIT Young Talent Award. She is a member of the New York chapter of the internationally active group "Students Supporting Israel".
Noam Petri studies medicine at the Charité Berlin and is vice president of the Jewish Students' Union Germany. For his year-long commitment he won the Frankfurt Citizen Award for Volunteering in 2021 and was nominated for the German Engagement Prize in 2022. The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung has described him as »"the >jack of all trades