As a field, German-Jewish Studies emphasizes the dangers of nationalism, monoculturalism, and ethnocentrism, while making room for multilingual and transnational perspectives with questions surrounding migration, refugees, exile, and precarity. Focussing on the relevance and utility of the field for the twenty-first century, German-Jewish Studies explores why studying and applying German-Jewish history and culture must evolve and be given further attention today. The volume brings together an interdisciplinary range of scholars to reconsider the history of antisemitismas well as intersections of antisemitism with racism and colonialismand how connections to German Jews shed light on the continuities, ruptures, anxieties, and possible futures of German-speaking Jews and their legacies.
Recenzijos
German-Jewish Studies makes a valuable contribution to the field. The chapters are of a high standard across the board and the volume will help students and academics get a good sense of how things in the field of German-Jewish studies stand: how healthy it is, where its strengths lie, and where gaps have merged that new research and perspectives could fill Christian Bailey, Purchase College
It is an original and impressive interdisciplinary collection of essays that are a window to the future in German-Jewish Studies Frank R. Nicosia, University of Vermont
List of Figures
Foreword
Frank Mecklenburg
Preface
Gerald Westheimer
Acknowledgments
Introduction: German-Jewish Studies for the Twenty-First Century
Kerry Wallach and Aya Elyada
Part I: From the Early Modern Period to the 19th Century: Families, Texts,
and Religious Identities
Chapter
1. Le-Dor va-Dor or Discontinuities? Family Networks and the
Transnational Turn in (German) Jewish Studies
Mirjam Thulin
Chapter
2. Old Yiddish Texts in German-Jewish Culture: Diachronic
Translation and the (Re)turn to the Past
Aya Elyada
Chapter
3. Orthodoxy as a German-Jewish Legacy
Joshua Shanes
Part II: Nation, Belonging, and Communities in the Early 20th Century
Chapter
4. Contested Contextualizations: Relating German-Jewish History to
the History of Colonialism
Stefan Vogt
Chapter
5. The Place of Yiddish in German-Jewish Studies
Nick Block
Chapter
6. Metaphysik der Gottferne: Negativity, Intellectual Communities,
and German-Jewish Studies
Matthew Handelman
Part III: Migration, Exile, and Diaspora in the 1930s and Beyond
Chapter
7. Art without Borders: Artist Rahel Szalit-Marcus and Jewish Visual
Culture
Kerry Wallach
Chapter
8. Woman, Scientist, and Jew: The Forced Migration of Berta
Ottenstein
Stefanie Mahrer
This chapter is available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license thanks
to the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation.
Chapter
9. A Global Network and Diaspora of German-Jewish Historians and
Archives: Reappraising the Enduring Legacy of German Jewry
Jason Lustig
Part IV: After 1945: Memory, Coming to Terms with the Past, Place, and
Displacement
Chapter
10. Jewish Mourning in the Aftermath of the Holocaust: Tending
Individual Graves in Occupied Germany, 19451949
Stefanie Fischer
Chapter
11. German-Jewish Fiction on the Holocaust: The Ethics of Narrative
Causality in Edgar Hilsenraths Disfigured Narration
Corey L. Twitchell
Chapter
12. (Un-)Jewish Musical Spaces in Munich Past and Present
Tina Frühauf
Epilogue: The Dynamic Relationship of German and Jewish
Michael A. Meyer
Index
Kerry Wallach is Associate Professor of German Studies and an affiliate of the Jewish Studies Program at Gettysburg College. She is the author of Passing Illusions: Jewish Visibility in Weimar Germany (University of Michigan Press, 2017) and numerous articles on German-Jewish literature, history, film, visual and consumer culture, and gender and sexuality. She serves on the Academic Advisory Board of the Leo Baeck Institute New York | Berlin and the editorial board of the book series German Jewish Cultures (Indiana University Press, supported by the Leo Baeck Institute London).