Ian Buruma’s New Book Stay Alive Reviewed in the Forward
Paul W. Williams Professor of Human Rights and Journalism Ian Buruma’s new book Stay Alive: Berlin, 1939-1945 was reviewed in the Forward. Named after a greeting Berliners used during Allied bombing, it follows how individual Germans’ lives changed at the end of World War II. Stay Alive was inspired in part by Buruma’s father, a forced laborer whose letters to his parents are included in the book. It “traces the disintegration of the city, from a thriving cultural redoubt to a battered hellscape, and the responses of its resilient but ultimately despairing residents,” Julia M. Klein writes, emphasizing that Buruma’s work is “at once panoramic and intimate, dispassionate and deeply moving.”
The Human Rights Program at Bard is a transdisciplinary program involving such diverse fields as literature, political studies, history, anthropology, economics, film and media, and art history. It emphasizes integrative historical and conceptual investigations, and offers a rigorous background that can inform meaningful practical engagements. The program seeks to orient students in the intellectual tradition of human rights and provide them the resources with which to appreciate and criticize its contemporary status.
Post Date: 03-24-2026
The Human Rights Program at Bard is a transdisciplinary program involving such diverse fields as literature, political studies, history, anthropology, economics, film and media, and art history. It emphasizes integrative historical and conceptual investigations, and offers a rigorous background that can inform meaningful practical engagements. The program seeks to orient students in the intellectual tradition of human rights and provide them the resources with which to appreciate and criticize its contemporary status.
Post Date: 03-24-2026