Navid Kermani: In Search of a Common Cause. Conversations Across the U.S.

Su. January 11, 2026–February 12, 2026
Location: Thomas Mann House (1550 N San Remo Drive, CA 90272)

A conversation series with Navid Kermani that explores how we can build and maintain solidarity in a polarized world marked by war, displacement, and political division. Organized by the Goethe-Institut in North America and the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

 

Info

Together with the Goethe-Institut in North America, the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles convenes an extensive transatlantic lecture tour and series of conversations with the acclaimed German writer Navid Kermani to explore how we can build and maintain solidarity among seemingly opposing identities, groups, and geopolitical alliances.

Navid Kermani, one of Germany’s most acclaimed writers and “among the most thoughtful intellectual voices in German today,” according to the New York Review of Books, recently visited some of the world’s major conflict zones, not as a political analyst, but as a literary observer. Together with various U.S. intellectuals and writers, Kermani will discuss: What does it mean to be a writer in a polarized world marked by war, displacement, and political division? How is the concept of “the West” changing? How might literature, poetry, and religion serve as bridges in fractured societies and foster solidarity? These events bring together acclaimed thinkers from both sides of the Atlantic for a conversation on literature, politics, and spirituality at a moment of profound global change.  

 
Polyphony is the elixir of Kermani's international renown: his encounters with times and worlds, in an age of increasing isolation, defend the idea that the world is more than everything that is the case. They defend the existence of something entirely different—the unexpected, the unheard of, and the supposedly lost. For Kermani's thinking, and this is often overlooked, possesses the power of the pariah, that outsider who has understood that one can use one's own dual belonging to one's advantage, both for oneself and for others. 

- Marie Luise Knott, Deutschlandfunk

 

Navid Kermani has established himself as one of Germany’s foremost public intellectuals. The child of Iranian immigrants, he has spoken of himself as belonging, like Heine or Goethe, to a tradition of German cosmopolitanism, open to the world and critical towards the nation. 

- Times Literary Supplement

Conversations

Jan 11, 2026 | Los Angeles Public Library

In Search of a Common Cause: A Conversation with Krista Tippett and Navid Kermani"

Location: Los Angeles Central Library, Los Angeles

Navid Kermani in conversation with Krista Tippett, author and award–winning host of the renowned podcast On Being.

More information here.

Jan 14, 2026 | Goethe-Institut Los Angeles

An Evening With Navid Kermani - A Literary Salon

Location: Goethe-Institut Los Angeles

Friederike von Schwerin-High in Conversation with Navid Kermani.

More information here.

Jan 22, 2026 | Goethe-Institut San Francisco

Navid Kermani in conversation with Jaron Lanier

Location: Goethe-Institut San Francisco

A conversation on the intersections of literature, technology, and democracy in contemporary society.

More information here.

Jan 27, 2026 | Goethe-Institut Houston

Navid Kermani in conversation with Andrea Bajani

Location: Goethe-Institut Houston

A conversation on what it means to be a writer in a polarized world and how to build bridges in fractured societies and foster solidarity.

More information here.

Jan 29, 2026 | Goethe-Institut Chicago

Navid Kermani in conversation with Anna Parkinson

Location: Goethe-Institut Chicago

More information soon.

Feb 4, 2026 | Goethe-Institut New York

Location: Goethe-Institut New York

More information soon.

Feb 10, 2026 | Goethe-Institut Washington

Location: Goethe-Institut Washington

More information soon.

Feb 11, 2026 | Goethe-Institut Boston

Location: Goethe-Institut Boston

More information soon.

Participants

Navid Kermani is an independent German writer living in Cologne. He studied Middle Eastern Studies, Philosophy, and Theater in Cologne, Cairo, and Bonn, where he received the post-doctoral degree (“Habilitation”). For his literary and academic work, he was awarded numerous prices, including the Hannah-Arendt-Prize, the Kleist-Prize, the Joseph-Breitbach-Preis, the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the Hölderlin-Prize and the Thomas Mann-Prize.  

His literary books are published by Carl Hanser Verlag (German) and Seagull Books (English), his academic and non-fictional works by C. H. Beck (German) and Polity Press (English).

Partner

An event series by the Goethe-Institut in North America in cooperation with the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles, and other U.S. partners.