A German woman’s vision of “racial purity” has grown into an international platform linking neo-Nazis, conspiracy theorists, and white nationalists in search of partners.
Eva Hoffmann studied cultural anthropology and media theory in Freiburg, Vienna, and Paris. She graduated from the Zeitenspiegel School of Reportage and writes primarily on social inequality, flight and migration, pop, and politics. She works as a freelance writer for ZEIT ONLINE.
A German woman’s vision of “racial purity” has grown into an international platform linking neo-Nazis, conspiracy theorists, and white nationalists in search of partners.