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  • RAMBI - רמב''י  (38)
  • FU Berlin  (23)
  • 2015-2019  (61)
Material
Language
Year
  • 1
    Journal/Serial
    Journal/Serial
    Münster ; New York ; München ; Berlin : Waxmann | Berlin ; Leipzig : de Gruyter | Stuttgart ; Berlin ; Köln ; Mainz : Kohlhammer | Göttingen : Schwartz ; N.F. 1=39.1929/30 - 11=49.1940; 50.1953-117. Jahrgang, 2 (2021)
    ISSN: 0044-3700 , 0044-3700 , 2699-5522
    Language: German
    Year of publication: 1930-2021
    Dates of Publication: N.F. 1=39.1929/30 - 11=49.1940; 50.1953-117. Jahrgang, 2 (2021)
    Additional Information: Beih. Volksforschung
    Parallel Title: Elektronische Reproduktion Zeitschrift für Volkskunde
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Zeitschrift für Volkskunde
    Former Title: Vorg.: Verein für Volkskunde 〈Berlin〉 Zeitschrift des Vereins für Volkskunde
    Former Title: Halbjahresschrift der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Volkskunde
    Subsequent Title: Fortgesetzt durch Zeitschrift für empirische Kulturwissenschaft
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Volkskunde ; Volkskunde ; Zeitschrift ; Volkskunde ; Deutsche Gesellschaft für Volkskunde
    Note: Zusatz wechselt , Erscheint halbjährlich, früher unregelmäßig , Repr. : Bad Feilnbach : Schmidt Periodicals , Beteil. Körp. anfangs: Verband Deutscher Vereine für Volkskunde; teils: Verband der Vereine für Volkskunde , 1941 - 1952 nicht ersch.; halbjährl.
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  • 2
    Language: German
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
    Angaben zur Quelle: 17 (2018) 237-270
    Keywords: Heym, Stefan, Friends and associates ; Heym, Stefan, Political and social views ; Havemann, Robert Political and social views ; Biermann, Wolf, Political and social views ; Jewish authors ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Influence ; Germany (East) Politics and government
    Abstract: Stefan Heym, whose life spanned all five political systems in Germany through the twentieth century, was regarded in both the Federal Republic and the German Democratic Republic as one of the most versatile and widely read authors of the postwar period. He was also understood as a moral and political symbol of the opposition in the GDR – as well as its most influential voice following the expatriation of Wolf Biermann in 1976. This article examines Heym’s by no means straightforward development, focusing on his friendships with Robert Havemann and Wolf Biermann. On the basis of autobiographical texts authored by the three former friends as well as the state security files on Heym, it reveals the various attitudes adopted towards the GDR as well as the state’s reactions. In its 11th Assembly, which took place in 1965, the Central Commission of the SED marked Havemann, Heym, and Biermann as the greatest interior public enemies of the GDR, whereupon Heym distanced himself from his friends. It is in this context that the three protagonists’ references to Nazi persecution and the Shoah will here be evaluated for the first time, with particular regard to potential parallels and intersections. By looking especially at the private sphere, beyond community and government politics, the article elucidates important aspects of a secular Jewish self-understanding in the GDR.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
    Angaben zur Quelle: 17 (2018) 497-514
    Keywords: Klausner, Margot, Archives ; ha-Bimah Archives ; Jews, German History ; Jewish theater History 20th century
    Abstract: In 1935, the relationship between Margot Klausner and Habima, now the National Theater of Israel, and at the time a prestigious Hebrew troupe operating as a collective of actors, ran into a severe crisis. The contentious termination of Klausner’s collaboration with Habima marked her disappearance from the history of Hebrew theater. Klausner left a large archival corpus that documents her managerial activity at the Habima secretariat and at the theater’s philanthropic organizations, yet her absence from the history of the National Theater of Israel also affected the poor handling of her archive. These documents, written mostly in German and dating from the years 1927 to 1935, remained uncatalogued and closed to researchers and the wider public for decades, until the inauguration of the project “Traces and Treasures of German-Jewish History in Israel,”, a joint project of the Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Research Center and the Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach. This article examines the rediscovered archival corpus, aiming to restore Klausner and her deeds to the history of Hebrew theater and to understand how this archival corpus challenges and reshapes our understanding of Habima’s history.
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
    Angaben zur Quelle: 17 (2018) 335-364
    Keywords: Kahane, Ariel, ; Kahane, Ariel, Archives ; Jewish architects ; Jews, German History 20th century ; Architects ; City planning ; Regional planning
    Abstract: This article explores the collection of the planner and architect Ariel (Anselm) Kahane (1907–1986), which is held at the Central Archive of the Hebrew University, as a “deliberate site” of utopian intention. Despite his high-ranking positions both within the British colonial and Israeli planning systems, Kahane has remained under the scholarly and professional radar, his work being almost entirely forgotten. Against this background, the article argues that the story of the making of the archive is linked to its utopian content, and that both of these aspects are rooted in Kahane’s cultural position as a Jecke, a German-trained planner operating within the context of Zionist nation-building. The article provides a first attempt at exploring this virtually unknown planner’s work and assessing his contribution to the field. It traces his attempts to call attention to his utopian blueprints drawn throughout his five-decade career: from his virtually unnoticed planning exhibition in Jerusalem in 1945 – arguably the first to be held in Palestine – to his work as a state planner in the 1950s and the unrealized New Town of Oshrat, through to his international activity as a UN expert in Turkey in the 1960s. The article charts Kahane’s development from being principally an importer, a producer, and later exporter of distinct professional knowledge. In doing so, it argues that Kahane’s story serves as a powerful platform from which to explore the encounter between German-Jewish intellectual migration, Zionist nation- building, and transnational circulation of knowledge and expertise.
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  • 5
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
    Angaben zur Quelle: 17 (2018) 425-446
    Keywords: Horovitz, Josef, Archives ; Plessner, Martin, Archives ; National Library of Israel. ; Personal archives ; Jewish scholars ; Jews, German ; Middle East Study and teaching 20th century ; History
    Abstract: The School of Oriental Studies was established at the newly founded Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1926 by scholars of Oriental studies who had been trained at German universities and immigrated to Palestine, transforming their textual encounter with the Orient into a physical one. In recent years, their archival collections at the National Library of Israel – many of them previously unknown or forgotten – were discovered, restored, and catalogued. This personal and scholarly transformation left its mark on the scholars’ estates, whose provenance and arrangement are a representation – or rather, a refraction – of the Orientalist knowledge migration process, especially after the Nazi rise to power in 1933. The scholarly estate of the Frankfurt-based professor of Semitic languages Josef Horovitz (1874–1931), founder and first director of the School of Oriental Studies in Jerusalem in absentia, was rejected by the University of Frankfurt, and consequently sent to Jerusalem, where it was somewhat reluctantly accepted and then forgotten for many years. The Arabic teacher and historian of science in Islam Martin Meir Plessner (1900–1973), who found the separation of science and politics utterly crucial (and difficult for an Arabic and Islam expert at the heart of the Arab-Jewish conflict), had his estate divided between two archival institutions for this reason. The stories of these archives are stories of rejection, exile, struggle, and neglect – and possibly, eventual redemption.
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  • 6
    Article
    Article
    In:  Military Aspects of the Israeli-Arab Conflict (2018) 178-183
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Military Aspects of the Israeli-Arab Conflict
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2018) 178-183
    Keywords: Yom Kippur War, 1973 Economic aspects ; Yom Kippur War, 1973 Influence ; Defense industries ; Israel Economic conditions 1973-
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  • 7
    Language: German
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: S: I. M. O. N.
    Angaben zur Quelle: 2 (2016) 37-57
    Keywords: Jews Biography ; Rural population ; Czechoslovakia Rural conditions
    Abstract: This paper deals with mostly published memories of Bohemian and Moravian Jews who were born and grew up in villages and small rural towns in the second half of the nineteenth or in the first decade of the twentieth century and who wrote down their histories before or after the Shoah. The first memories, mainly autobiographical fiction, recounting the end of the nineteenth century, were largely a reaction to the process of urbanisation which led to an important migration of Jews to the cities. After 1918, amateur historiography became important in the remembrance of rural Jewish life and was often triggered by feelings of nostalgia. Both forms of cultural memory- (partly autobiographical) fiction and popular historiography- also framed the patterns of remembering rural Jews after the Shoah. Nostalgia was often expressed in connection with sensation, for example in descriptions of religious traditions and habits. In contrast to the testimonies written before the Shoah the ambivalent longing for a place was now overlaid with the irreversible loss of people, the authors' mourning of their lost relatives, friends and neighbours, and with the emptiness of the remembered places.
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  • 8
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2019
    Titel der Quelle: מכאן; כתב-עת לחקר הספרות והתרבות היהודית והישראלית
    Angaben zur Quelle: טו (תשעט) 296-318
    Keywords: Agnon, Shmuel Yosef, ; Agnon, Shmuel Yosef, Criticism and interpretation ; Hebrew fiction, Modern History and criticism ; Hebrew fiction, Modern Themes, motives
    Note: With an English summary.
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  • 9
    ISBN: 9783835335653
    Language: English
    Pages: 264 Seiten , Illustrationen , 23 cm
    Year of publication: 2019
    Series Statement: European Holocaust studies volume 2
    Series Statement: European Holocaust studies
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The Holocaust in the Borderlands
    DDC: 940.53180947
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: 1939-1945 ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) ; Holocauste, 1939-1945 - Europe de l'Est ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) - Europe, Eastern ; Eastern Europe ; Europe, Eastern - Ethnic relations ; Konferenzschrift ; Konferenzschrift 2018 ; Judenvernichtung ; Osteuropa ; Geschichte 1933-1945 ; Deutschland ; Besatzungspolitik ; Zweiter Weltkrieg ; Judenvernichtung ; Osteuropa ; Geschichte 1933-1945 ; Deutschland ; Osteuropa ; Besatzungspolitik ; Zweiter Weltkrieg
    Abstract: Introduction--The Holocaust in the Borderlands : Interethnic Relations and the Dynamics of Violence in Occupied Eastern Europe / Gaëlle Fisher and Caroline Mezger -- The Rise of Antisemitism in the Multiethnic Borderland of Bukovina : Student Movements and Interethnic Clashes at the University of Cernauti (1922-1938) / Anca Filipovici -- Saving Christianity, Killing Jews : German Religious Campaigns and the Holocaust in the Borderlands / Doris L. Bergen -- Hungarians, Germans, and Serbs in Wartime Vojvodina : Patterns of Attitudes and Behaviors towards Jews in a Multiethnic Border Region of Hungary / Linda Margittai -- The Ustasha Youth and the Aryanization of Jewish Property in the Independent State of Croatia, 1941-1945 / Goran Miljan -- Local Agency and the Appropriation of Jewish Property in Romania's Eastern Borderland : Public Employees during the Holocaust in Bessarabia (1941-1944) / Svetlana Suveica -- Listening to the Different Voices : Jewish, Polish, and Ukrainian Narratives on Jewish Property in Nazi-Occupied Eastern Galicia / Anna Wylegala -- "Gornisht oyser verier"?! Khurbn-shprakh as a Mirror of the Dynamics of Violence in German-Occupied Eastern Europe / Miriam Schulz -- Law Decree on Racial Affiliation (April 30,1941) in the Independent State of Croatia / Sanela Schmid -- Fascist Italy and the "Other" : Italianization and the Holocaust in the Triveneto Borderlands, 1918-1948 / Elysa Ivie McConnell -- Vanishing Point Transnistria : Post-Imperial Biographies and German Transnational Continuities in an Age of Empire-Building and Ideologized Mass Violence / Frank Gorlich -- Transcultural Networks in Narratives about the Holocaust in Eastern Europe / Dana Mihailescu -- The Extermination Site Malyj Trostenec : History and Memory / Aliaksandr Dalhouski -- EHRI Seminars : Researching and Remembering the Holocaust in the Twenty-First Century / Anna Ullrich -- About the Authors.
    Note: "The articles in this volume are based on papers presented at the international workshop "The Holocaust in the Borderlands: Interethnic Relations and the Dynamics of Violence in Occupied Eastern Europe," held in February 2018 at the Center for Holocaust Studies at the Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History (IFZ) in Munich." - (Introduction, Seite 10)
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  • 10
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2018
    Titel der Quelle: Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts
    Angaben zur Quelle: 17 (2018) 15-33
    Keywords: Brenner, Joseph Hayyim, Criticism and interpretation ; Hebrew fiction, Modern History and criticism ; Jewish authors ; Modernism (Literature) ; Nineteen tens ; National characteristics in literature
    Abstract: This article addresses the revolutionary first modernist chapter in the history of Hebrew literature as reflected and shaped in the prose of the Hebrew writer Yosef Ḥayim Brenner during the first decade of the twentieth century. These turbulent years, which were marked by violent atrocities, massive population movements across borders, and increasing economic distress, brought about the rise of the earliest form of Hebrew literary modernism within Eastern European Jewish society. This article approaches this development as a crisis of spectatorship. Being the prior condition for any act of representation of reality, spectatorship was problematized in times when the Hebrew narrator was looking for, and could not find, a vantage point from which he could observe this reality. For Brenner, the problem of gaze and vision appeared as the most acute kinship to the political-aesthetic form of Jewish modern experience. Thus, through his ongoing debate on the status of vision – imbued with a strong impulse of criticism of sovereign power – he sketched the new contours of Hebrew modernist aesthetics.
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