Elliot Neaman

[5] Neaman is also one of the editors of a Festschrift for his mentor from UC Berkeley, Prof. Martin Jay, called The Modernist Imagination (Berghahn 2009).

He was clearly a right-wing ideologue and leader of the anti-republican war veterans in Germany during the 1920s, but he opposed the Nazis after 1933 and made his peace with the Federal Republic after 1949.

[11] In 2015 a Swedish publisher, Edda, brought out the first English translation of Ernst Jünger's postwar novel A Visit to Godenholm, which is a veiled account of an LSD drug trip.

He wrote the foreword to a new translation of Ernst Jünger's World War II journals, A German Officer in Occupied France, 1941-1945, by Columbia University Press.

[17] He contributed a chapter to Mark Sedgwick's edited collection, Key Thinkers of the Radical Right; Behind the New Threat to Liberal Democracy (Oxford University Press, 2019).