The 'Jewish Question' in German Literature, 1749-1939
Emancipation and its Discontents
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 18 October 2001
- ISBN 9780199248889
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages544 pages
- Size 218x139x29 mm
- Weight 624 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Gradually receiving legal rights from the eighteenth century onwards, Jews in Germany and Austria adapted to their surrounding culture with success but also with increasing strain as antisemitism gathered pace. Ritchie Robertson offers a cogent examination of this dual process and investigates how its tensions were articulated in a range of literary works, by both Jews and Gentile authors, from the Enlightenment to the 1930s.
MoreLong description:
The 'Jewish Question' in German Literature, 1749-1939 is an erudite and searching literary study of the uneasy position of the Jews in Germany and Austria from the first pleas for Jewish emancipation during the Enlightenment to the eve of the Holocaust. Trying to avoid hindsight, and drawing on a wide range of literary texts, Ritchie Robertson offers a close examination of attempts to construct a Jewish identity suitable for an increasingly secular world. He examines both literary portrayals of Jews by Gentile writers - whether antisemitic, friendly, or ambivalent - and efforts to reinvent Jewish identities by the Jews themselves, in response to antisemitism culminating in Zionism. No other study by a single author deals with German-Jewish relations so comprehensively and over such a long period of literary history. Robertson's new work will prove stimulating for anyone interested in the modern Jewish experience, as well as for scholars and students of German fiction, prose, and political culture.
Review from previous edition Robertson does an admirable job in identifying and analyzing the complex development of 'the Jewish Question.'
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Enlightenment; German Jewry before Emancipation; How the Enlightenment saw the Jews; Lessing and Toleration; Emancipation: Dohm versus Humboldt; Moses Mendelssohn and the Rational Jew; Mendelssohns Legacy
Liberalism; Jews and Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century; Schnitzler: Liberalism and Irony; The European Humanism of Stefan Zweig; Freud: Science versus Religion
Antisemitism; Varieties of Antisemitism; Literary Images of the Jew
Assimilation; The Meaning of Assimilation; Self-Hatred; Hyperacculturation
Dissimilation; The Jewish Renaissance; The Eastern Jews; The Jew as Oriental
Zionism
Abbreviations
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