The Jewish Response to German Culture: From the Enlightenment to the Second World War.

Hanover and London: Published for Clark University by University Press of New England, 1985. First Edition. Hardbound. Octavo in dust jacket, xvi, 362 pp., index. Very Good. Item #68201
ISBN: 0874513456

Articles are "Jewish Emancipation: Between Bildung and Respectibility," George L. Mosse, "Moses Mendelssohn as the Archetypal German Jew," Alexander Altmann, "The Kassel 'Ha-Meassef' of 1799: An Unknown Contribution to the Haskalah," Walter Röll, "Hermann Cohen: Judaism in the Context of German Philosophy," Nathan Rotenstreich, "Reform Jewish Thinkers and Their German Intellectual Context," Michael A. Meyer, "German Culture and the Jews," Jacob Katz, "The Invisible Community: Emancipation, Secular Culture, and Jewish Identity in the Writings of Berthold Auerbach," David Sorkin, "Heine's Jewish Writer Friends: Dilemmas of a Generation 1817-33," Lothar Kahn, "Fin-de-Siecle Vienna: The Jewish Contribution," Harry Zohn, "German-Jewish and German-Christian Writers: Cooperation in Exile," Guy Stern, "Wilhelm II and the Kaiserjuden: A Problematical Encounter," Werner E. Mosse, "The Dynamics of Dissimilation: Ostjuden and German Jews," Shulamit Volkov, "'The Jew Within': The Myth of 'Judaization' in Germany," Steven E. Aschheim, "Sisterhood under Siege: Feminism and Antisemitism in Germany, 1904-1938," Marion Kaplan, "The Zionist Response to Antisemitism in the Weimar Republic," Jehuda Reinharz, "Jewish Cultural Centers in nazi Germany: Expectations and Accomplishments," Kurt Düwell, "Lost, Stolen, and Strayed: The Acrhival Heritage of Modern German-Jewish History," Sybil H. Milton.

Price: $10.00

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