Hans Menasse: The Austrian Boy
by Peter Menasse, Agnes Meisinger, and Alexander Juraske
Compiled by a group of distinguished international scholars, including John Pocock, Diana Pinto, Thomas Maissen and Fania Oz-Salzberger, this volume offers a threefold intellectual juncture. Its contributors analyse the liberal-republican tension-field in a novel way, juxtaposing early modern political thought with twenty-first century political concerns. The volume conjoins Israeli political scholarship with its European and American counterparts, mapping differentials and commonalities. Topi...
The Tenement Saga
A celebrated Israeli author explores the roots of the divide between religion and secularism in Israel today, and offers a path to bridging the divide "A thoughtful social, political, and philosophical examination of Judaism. . . . A cogent consideration of the place of religion in the modern world."—Kirkus Reviews Zionism began as a movement full of contradictions, between a pull to the past and a desire to forge a new future. Israel has become a place of fragmentation, between those who san...
Difference of a Different Kind (Jewish Culture and Contexts)
by Iris Idelson-Shein
European Jews, argues Iris Idelson-Shein, occupied a particular place in the development of modern racial discourse during the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Simultaneously inhabitants and outsiders in Europe, considered both foreign and familiar, Jews adopted a complex perspective on otherness and race. Often themselves the objects of anthropological scrutiny, they internalized, adapted, and revised the emerging discourse of racial difference to meet their own ends. Difference...
Bibliographie De L'oeuvre De Georges Vajda (Collection de la Revue des Etudes Juives, v.8)
by P. B. Fenton
This is the story of Valerie as she finishes her exams, breaks up with her boyfriend and then leaves to take up her national service with the Israeli army. Nothing has prepared her for the strict routines, gruelling marches, lack of sleep, poor food, absence of privacy or crushing of initiative. However, the book also depicts the undeniable excitements of the work, including working in a 'spying centre' near Jerusalem, listening in on the communications of the Jordanian pilots. This book offers...
How have Jews reshaped their identities as Jews in the face of the radical newness called America? Julian Levinson explores the ways in which exposure to American literary culture-in particular the visionary tradition identified with Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman-led American Jewish writers to a new understanding of themselves as Jews. Discussing the lives and work of writers such as Emma Lazarus, Mary Antin, Ludwig Lewisohn, Waldo Frank, Anzia Yezierska, I. J. Schwartz, Alfred Kazin, and...
Contemporary Jewry
Anthology of Yiddish Folksongs
by Aharon Vinkovetzy, Abba Kovner, and Sinai Leichter
Judeans and Jews (The Kenneth Michael Tanenbaum Series in Jewish Studies)
by Daniel R. Schwartz
In writing in English about the classical era, is it more appropriate to refer to "Jews" or to "Judeans"? What difference does it make? Today, many scholars consider "Judeans" the more authentic term, and "Jews" and "Judaism" merely anachronisms. In Judeans and Jews, Daniel R. Schwartz argues that we need both terms in order to reflect the dichotomy between the tendencies of those, whether in Judea or in the Disapora, whose identity was based on the state and the land (Judeans), and those whose...
Jodie dreams of one day becoming a famous archaeologist and when her father takes her to visit a dig in Modi'in, Israel, home of the Maccabees, she is uniquely able to help.
Jahrbuch Des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts / Simon Dubnow Institute Yearbook X (2011)
Patriotism Perverted (History and Politics)
by Professor Richard Griffiths
Beginning with an overview of the 1930s at the time of Hitler''s accession to power, and utilising primary sources, Patriotism Perverted is a study of British anti-Semitic and pro-Nazi groups and individuals prevalent at the time.'