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  • New York, NY u.a. : Oxford Univ. Press  (1)
  • 1
    ISBN: 0195083261
    Language: English
    Pages: XII, 300 S. , Ill., Kt.
    Year of publication: 1994
    Series Statement: Studies in Jewish history
    DDC: 943.1/55004924 20
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    Keywords: Jüdische Gemeinde zu Berlin ; Geschichte 1700-1800 ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Geschichte 1770-1830 ; Joden ; Geschichte ; Juden ; Jews -- Germany -- Berlin -- History -- 18th century ; Jews -- Germany -- Berlin -- History -- 19th century ; Jews -- Cultural assimilation -- Germany -- Berlin ; Jews -- Emancipation -- Germany -- Berlin ; Juden ; Assimilation ; Emanzipation ; Deutschland ; Berlin (Germany) -- Ethnic relations ; Berlin ; Berlin ; Juden ; Geschichte 1770-1830 ; Jüdische Gemeinde zu Berlin ; Assimilation ; Emanzipation ; Geschichte 1770-1830 ; Juden ; Berlin ; Geschichte 1770-1830
    Abstract: Berlin Jewry was the first major Jewish community to undergo the process of modernization which has since swept most of world Jewry. The process of adaptation to the cultural, linguistic and political life of the majority culture first proposed by intellectuals of the Jewish Enlightenment (Haskala) was accompanied by a thoroughgoing crisis of Jewish identity. Berlin Jewry was soon faced by patterns of illegitimacy, marital breakdown and conversion to Christianity on a scale never witnessed before. Scholars have long debated the severity of the crisis of Berlin Jewry as well as its connection to the philosophy and practice of the Jewish Enlightenment. The Berlin Jewish Community endeavors to settle much of the debate through a collective biography of all 3,500 Jews in Berlin at the time. The extraordinarily rich documentation about the life of Berlin Jewry in the period makes it possible to trace the personal and family connections between those involved in modernizing activities with those involved in the later crisis. The results of this study show that one in four families had members that converted and that pro-Enlightenment families were more likely to have converted relatives than were traditionalists. This correlation is not simply a matter of Enlightenment "responsibility" for the crisis, but rather was produced by a very complex and often contradictory process of moving from traditional to modern Jewish life. In this original and imaginative book, Steven M. Lowenstein presents definitive data on the dimensions and social dynamics of the crisis of Berlin Jewry at the end of the eighteenth century. It will be of interest to scholars and students of modern Jewish history, German history, social history, and modern Jewish religious and intellectual developments.
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