The Frankfurt Judengasse in Eyewitness Accounts from the
Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century - Eoin Bourke
Enlightened and Romantic Views of the Ghetto: David Frieländer
versus Heinrich Heine - Ritchie Robertson
Reclaiming the Location: Leopold Kompert's Ghetto Fiction in
Post-Colonial Perspective - Florian Krobb
German Versus Jargon: Language and Jewish Identity in German Ghetto
Writing - Gabriele Glasenapp
Eastern Jews and the Sociology of Nationalism - Chris Thornhill
Pogroms in Literary Representation - Joachim Beug
Philo-Simetic Tendencies in Wilhelm Jensen's Historical Novel Die
Juden von Cölln - Joerg Thunecke
Views from fin-de-Siécle Vienna: Zionist Images of Eastern Jews in
Herzl's Die Welt - Paul E. Kerry
The Construction of the Eastern Jewry in Joseph Roth's Juden auf
Wanderschaft - David Horrocks
From Ghetto to Nation: Hofmannsthal's Poetics of Assimilation -
Michael Kane
Persecution, Exile, and the Mental Ghetto in Henry William Katz's
Novel Die Fischmanns - Ena Pedersen
The Shtetl's Curiosity and Style: Alexander Granach's
Autobiographical Novel Da ghet ein Mensch - Michael Schmidt
Edgar Hilsenrath's Poetics of Insignificance and the Tradition of
Humour in German-Jewish Ghetto Writing - Anne Fuchs
"Beyond the Jewish Ghetto: The Ghetto in Modern Punk and Rap
Culture" by Frank Möbus and Martin B. Münch
Anne Fuchs is professor of modern German literature and culture at University College Dublin. Anne Fuchs is professor of modern German literature and culture at University College Dublin.
A scintillating glimpse of a literary treasure trove.' CANADIAN
JEWISH NEWS 'Should be of much use to those who study or teach
German-Jewish literary and cultural relations.' GERMAN QUARTERLY '
The publication is of interest as in introduction into the material
not only for the Germanist but also for the layperson.' ASCHKENAS
'The great breadth of this collection of essays makes it especially
valuable.' GERMANISTIK 'This volume is bound to be of great
interest to anyone interested in the works that chronicle the
journey of the Yiddish speakers of Central and Eastern Europe from
medieval ghettos to the attempted assimilation into the German
cultural world.
*SHOFAR*
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