Hate

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A01=Seyda Kurt
activism
anti-racism
Author_Seyda Kurt
Category=JBCC
Category=JMQ
Category=JPWQ
Category=QDX
classism
collective resistance
colonialism
demonstrations
discrimination
economic inequality
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
feminism
feminist theory
German public intellectual
LASTESIS
Luisa Toledo
patriarchy
philosophy
police violence
political essay
political feelings
post-racism
poverty
protest movements
resistance
revolutionary movements
Rojava
sexual harassment
social justice

Product details

  • ISBN 9781804298107
  • Weight: 261g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Verso Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Who is allowed to hate? Hatred, this grating, corrosive feeling, is omnipresent, roaring from the streets or whispered in bourgeois homes. It thrives in parliamentary speeches, conspiracy theorists' fantasies and children's bedrooms - and certainly not in secret, even if many would like to see it restricted there.

German bestselling author Seyda Kurt frees hatred from its banishment and sets out on the trail of its potential for resistance. She is particularly interested in people as subjects of hatred in a capitalist, racist and patriarchal world. Who are these haters and what power relations do they base them selves on? Who is allowed to hate? Which feelings paralyse, and which ones guide us to a fairer, more caring society?

Ruthlessly, humorously and going beyond any self-righteous indignation, Seyda Kurt explores the possibility of a serviceable hatred that connects with people who feel a deep sense of discontent and helps us to find a collective way forward.
Seyda Kurt born in Cologne in 1992, studied philosophy, Romance studies and cultural journalism in Cologne, Bordeaux and Berlin. As a freelance journalist and columnist, she writes for various print and online media in Germany, including ZEIT ONLINE and Deutschlandfunk Kultur. As an editor, she worked on the Spotify original podcast about the Hanau shootings (190220 - Ein Jahr nach Hanau), which won the prestigious Grimme Online Award in 2021. In her best selling book Radical Tenderness, she examined love in the forcefield of patriarchy, capitalism and racism.

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