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Schocken Books

Schocken Books is a book publishing imprint of Penguin Random House that specializes in Jewish literary works. Originally established in 1931 by Salman Schocken as Schocken Verlag in Berlin, the company later moved to Palestine and then the United States, and was acquired by Random House in 1987.

Parent company

1931

History[edit]

Schocken Books was founded in 1931 by Schocken Department Store owner Salman Schocken. Schocken has published the writings of Martin Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, Franz Kafka and S. Y. Agnon, among others.[1]


After being shut down by the Germans in 1939, Schocken, who immigrated from Germany to Palestine in 1934, founded the Hebrew-language Schocken Publishing House in Mandatory Palestine. Schocken moved to the United States in 1940. In 1945 he founded the English-language Schocken Books in New York City. In 1987 it was bought up by Random House. Schocken Books continues to publish Jewish literary works.

Bücherei des Schocken Verlag

Nahum Norbert Glatzer

Haaretz

Books in the United States

Books in Germany

Official website

- Katharine McNamara talks with Altie Karper.

A Conversation about Schocken Books - Part I

- Katharine McNamara talks with Susan Ralston.

A Conversation about Schocken Books - Part II

- Katharine McNamara talks with Arthur Samuelson.

A Conversation about Schocken Books - Part III

Stephen M. Poppel (1973). . Harvard Library Bulletin. 21. ISSN 0017-8136. Free access icon

"Salman Schocken and the Schocken Verlag: a Jewish publisher in Weimar and Nazi Germany"