Joseph Pearson (writer) explained
Joseph Pearson |
Birth Place: | Edmonton, Canada |
Nationality: | Canadian / Italian |
Joseph Sanders Pearson (born 1975 in Edmonton, Alberta) is a Canadian essayist, cultural historian, and journalist.
Life
Between 1997 and 2001, Pearson received his doctorate in Modern History at the University of Cambridge.[1] [2] Pearson has taught in the humanities at Columbia University,[3] New York University,[4] the Berlin University of the Arts,[5] and the Barenboim–Said Academy, a peace project headed by conductor Daniel Barenboim.[6] He is the nephew of children's novelist Kit Pearson.[7]
Career
His history and portrait of the German capital, Berlin, was published by Reaktion Press[8] and University of Chicago Press[9] in 2017. The Independent called Berlin "the last word in explaining not only Berlin’s incredible history, but also its present day cultural situation"[10] and Bloomberg reported that the book "masterfully offers a close reading of the metropolis in all its brutal immediacy".[11] The book was also positively reviewed in The German Studies Review.[12]
Pearson's new book My Grandfather's Knife was published by HarperCollins and The History Press in April 2022, with a Spanish translation by Planeta in October 2022. The book tells the stories of Second World War witnesses through everyday objects they owned.[13] The Spectator reported the book "sheds intriguing new light" on the period’s history,[14] while the book received positive reviews in the Literary Review of Canada[15] and elsewhere, with Norman Ohler, author of Blitzed, calling the book, "literary non-fiction at its best".[16] A chapter from the book, regarding Nazi plunder of string instruments obtained by the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda, appeared in German in the literary review Lettre International.[17]
Pearson's work has appeared in Newsweek,[18] The New England Review,[19] [20] the BBC,[21] AGNI,[22] Monocle Magazine,[23] Prism International[24] and many other publications. His non-fiction has been translated into German, French, Arabic, Mandarin and other languages.[25]
Pearson is based in Berlin, Germany, where he is the in-house essayist of the Schaubühne Theatre[26] and the editor of The Needle,[27] one of Berlin's most popular blogs.[28] He is a founding member of the artist collective, 'AGOSTO'.[29]
Awards
In 2020, he was awarded a Jacob Zilber Prize for Short Fiction (First Runner-up), for his story "An Iconostasis".[30] The story was nominated in 2020 for the Pushcart Prize.[31]
External links
Notes and References
- Book: Brendan Simms. Unfinest Hour: Britain and the Destruction of Bosnia (ref. 216). 4 July 2002. Penguin Books Limited. 978-0-14-193767-0. 543.
- PhD . Pearson . Joseph Sanders. . 17 July 2001 . British press reactions to the onset of war in ex-Yugoslavia.. University of Cambridge . Faculty of History.
- Slow Travel Author Biography Retrieved 5 July 2018
- Joseph Pearson lectures at NYU Retrieved 5 July 2018.
- Web site: Your Berlin Story – An Alternative Creative Non-Fiction Writing Workshop . Berlin University of the Arts . The Universität der Künste Berlin . 27 September 2018.
- Web site: Faculty Profile Barenboim-Said Academy . Barenboim-Said Academy . 21 November 2018.
- Book: Kit Pearson's first novel The Daring Game is dedicated to her nephew and niece . 978-0-14-318634-2. 6 January 2019. Pearson. Kit. 18 September 2007. Tundra Book .
- Web site: Berlin by Joseph Pearson from Reaktion Books . Reaktion Books . 1 June 2017 . 2 December 2021.
- Web site: Berlin . University of Chicago Press . Cityscopes . 24 September 2021 . 2 December 2021.
- Web site: Allen . Tony . 8 best Berlin guide books . . 25 September 2017 . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220617/https://www.independent.co.uk/extras/indybest/travel-outdoors/travel-books/best-berlin-guide-book-travel-city-reviews-lonely-planet-a7948096.html . 17 June 2022 . subscription . live . 2 December 2021.
- Book: Berlin, Cityscopes. Pearson, Joseph (Reaktion Books, 2017) . 15 May 2017 . 123Library . 978-1-78023-766-4 . 2 December 2021.
- Mirko M. Hall, "Berlin Calling: A Story of Anarchy, Music, the Wall, and the Birth of the New Berlin by Paul Hockenos, and: Cityscopes: Berlin by Joseph Pearson", vol. 41, no. 2 (2018), German Studies Review Retrieved 21 November 2018
- "The History Press lands 'enthralling account' of hidden war stories from Pearson" in The Bookseller Retrieved 14 November 2021
- Matthew Reisz, "The History of Nazism in Small Objects" in The Spectator Retrieved 8 May 2023
- Marlo Alexandra Burks, "Reverberations: The Language of Silent Things" in Literary Review of Canada Retrieved 8 May 2023
- Norman Ohler on My Grandfather's Knife, HarperCollins book webpage Retrieved 8 May 2023
- Joseph Pearson, "Ein Saiteninstrument" in Lettre International 138, Autumn 2022 Retrieved 8 May 2023
- Web site: Pearson . Joseph . German Theater Director Thomas Ostermeier Takes on the Far-Right . Newsweek . 2018 Newsweek LLC . 27 September 2018 . 12 April 2016.
- Web site: Pearson . Joseph . This Is Also Tangier . New England Review . NER . 27 September 2018.
- "Three German Cities", New England Review Retrieved 5 July 2018
- Web site: Pearson . Joseph . What the German Language reveals about attitudes to work . BBC Capital . BBC . 27 September 2018 . 23 October 2017.
- AGNI authors Retrieved 5 July 2018
- "Habsburg Hipsters and the Future of Europe", Monocle Forecast (2016) Retrieved 5 July 2018
- Prism International Portraits of prize winners Retrieved 2 Feb 2021
- The Needle, About the Author Retrieved 5 July 2018
- Pearson's Preview, Schaubühne Theatre Retrieved 5 July 2018
- The Needle Berlin: About the Editor Retrieved 5 July 2018
- Berlin's Best Blogs Retrieved 5 July 2018
- AGOSTO / artist collective website Retrieved 12 January 2021
- PRISM International literary magazine webpage Retrieved 19 April 2020
- Author's webpage Retrieved 7 January 2021