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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • English  (283)
  • Hebrew  (71)
  • Italian  (2)
  • Israel  (346)
  • Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism
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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Durham, NC [u.a.] : Duke Univ. Press
    ISBN: 9780822353737 , 9780822353584 , 0822353733
    Language: English
    Pages: 193 p. , 25 cm
    Year of publication: 2012
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Jewish-Arab relations ; Arab-Israeli conflict ; Sexual minorities / Political activity / Israel ; Palestinian Arabs / Government policy / Israel ; Palestinian Arabs / Israel / Social conditions ; Nahostkonflikt ; Politik ; Palästinenser ; Juden ; Palästinafrage ; Homosexualität ; Nahostkonflikt ; Israel ; Palästinafrage ; Nahostkonflikt ; Homosexualität ; Palästinenser ; Juden ; Israel
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  • 2
    ISBN: 1589830660
    Language: English
    Pages: XIII, 510 S. , Ill., Kt.
    Year of publication: 2003
    Series Statement: SBL symposium series 18
    DDC: 221.9/5
    RVK:
    Keywords: Bible O.T ; Antiquities ; Bible Antiquities ; Jerusalem in the Bible ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Jerusalem History ; Jerusalem Antiquities ; Jerusalem History ; Jerusalem Antiquities ; Jerusalem In the Bible ; Jerusalem ; Konferenzschrift ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Jerusalem ; Biblische Archäologie ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Jerusalem ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Geschichte Anfänge-700 v. Chr. ; Jerusalem ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Bibel Altes Testament ; Jerusalem ; Geschichte 1000 v. Chr.-100 ; Jerusalem ; Biblische Archäologie ; Israel ; Geschichte 1000 v. Chr.-586 v. Chr. ; Jerusalem ; Bibel Altes Testament ; Biblische Archäologie ; Geschichte 1000 v. Chr.-100
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9783955655471 , 3955655474
    Language: English
    Pages: 77 Seiten , Illustrationen , 15.5 cm x 11.5 cm
    Edition: 1st edition
    Year of publication: 2022
    Series Statement: Jewish miniatures volume 299A
    Series Statement: Jüdische Miniaturen
    Parallel Title: Parallele Sprachausgabe Trautmann, Sven, 1989 - Channa Gildoni
    DDC: 940.5318092
    RVK:
    Keywords: Biografie ; Gildoni, Channa 1923-2023 ; Leipzig ; Kind ; Jüdin ; Judenverfolgung ; Flucht ; Geschichte 1923-1940 ; Israel ; Deutsche Einwanderin ; Jüdin ; Soziale Integration ; Vergangenheitsbewältigung ; Geschichte 1941-2019 ; Gildoni, Channa 1923-2023 ; Kind ; Leipzig ; Geschichte 1923-1939
    Note: Ausgabevermerk gegenüber Haupttitelseite 1st edition 2021
    URL: Inhaltsverzeichnis  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 4
    Book
    Book
    Madison, Wis : University of Wisconsin Press
    ISBN: 0299221601 , 9780299221607
    Language: English
    Pages: X, 188 S.
    Year of publication: 2007
    DDC: 343.569407664
    RVK:
    Keywords: Food law and legislation ; Swine Law and legislation ; Jews Dietary laws ; Muslims Dietary laws ; Pork Religious aspects ; Food law and legislation Israel ; Jews Israel ; Dietary laws ; Muslims Israel ; Dietary laws ; Pork Relgious aspects ; Israel ; Israel ; Juden ; Ernährung ; Gebot ; Israel ; Muslim ; Ernährung ; Gebot ; Israel ; Ernährung ; Religion ; Gebot ; Schweinefleisch ; Israel ; Juden ; Ernährung ; Gebot ; Israel ; Muslim ; Ernährung ; Gebot ; Israel ; Ernährung ; Religion ; Gebot ; Schweinefleisch
    Description / Table of Contents: Religious symbols and culture in Israeli lawPig prohibitions in Jewish and Israeli culture -- Toward independence : the British mandate in the 1930s and 1940s -- The establishment of the state and the politics of nation-building -- Laying the foundations : legislation in the 1950s and 1960s -- Formative battles of enforcement -- From status quo to political conflict : the 1970s and 1980s -- The renewed challenge : the 1990s and onwards -- National symbol or religious concern?
    Description / Table of Contents: Religious symbols and culture in Israeli law -- Pig prohibitions in Jewish and Israeli culture -- Toward independence : the British mandate in the 1930s and 1940s -- The establishment of the state and the politics of nation-building -- Laying the foundations : legislation in the 1950s and 1960s -- Formative battles of enforcement -- From status quo to political conflict : the 1970s and 1980s -- The renewed challenge : the 1990s and onwards -- National symbol or religious concern?
    Note: Religious symbols and culture in Israeli law -- Pig prohibitions in Jewish and Israeli culture -- Toward independence: the British mandate in the 1930s and 1940s -- The establishment of the state and the politics of nation-building -- Laying the foundations: legislation in the 1950s and 1960s -- Formative battles of enforcement -- From status quo to political conflict: the 1970s and 1980s -- The renewed challenge: the 1990s and onwards -- National symbol or religious concern. - Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9781636250502
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (184 p)
    Edition: [Online-Ausgabe]
    Year of publication: 2021
    Keywords: Academic freedom ; Academic freedom ; RELIGION / Religious Intolerance, Persecution & Conflict ; BDS ; Birzeit ; Gaza ; Hamas ; Israel ; Israeli occupation ; Palestine ; West Bank ; academic freedom ; anti_Zionism ; two-state solution ; universities
    Abstract: Frontmatter -- ABOUT AEN'S RESEARCH PAPER SERIES -- CONTENTS -- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS -- PREFACE -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- 1. TWO FURTHER FACULTY PORTRAITS -- 2. THE ESTABLISHMENT OF PALESTINIAN UNIVERSITIES: ACADEMICS VS. ACTIVISM -- 3. THE PALESTINIAN STUDENT MOVEMENT -- 4. BIRZEIT UNIVERSITY NEAR RAMALLAH -- 5. STUDENT POLITICAL FACTIONS RECENTLY AT WAR -- 6. THE ASSAULTS ON COLLABORATORS AND NORMALIZERS -- 7. FREEDOM OF THE PRESS AND ACADEMIC FREEDOM -- 8. TERRORISM AT AN-NAJAH UNIVERSITY IN NABLUS -- 9. STUDENT TERRORISTS AT OTHER PALESTINIAN CAMPUSES -- 10. ISLAMIC AND AL-AZHAR UNIVERSITIES OF GAZA -- 11. ANTI-ZIONIST AND ISLAMIST CURRICULA -- 12. STUDENTS TRAVELING FROM GAZA -- 13. FOREIGN FACULTY TRAVEL TO ISRAEL AND THE WEST BANK -- CONCLUSION -- CODA -- REFERENCES -- INDEX -- ABOUT THE AUTHOR -- ABOUT AEN
    Abstract: For years, anti-Zionist activists have accused Israel of undermining academic freedom and campus free speech in both Gaza and the West Bank. Not in Kansas Anymore demonstrates conclusively that the major threats to academic freedom come from Palestinians themselves, including from both the Palestinian Authority and from paramilitary and terrorist groups, Hamas most prominent among them. This is the first thoroughly researched and documented study of the status of academic freedom in Gaza and the West Bank
    Note: Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web. , In English
    URL: Cover
    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: Interpreting Primo Levi
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2016) 147-160
    Keywords: Levi, Primo, ; Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism ; Memory Psychological aspects ; Metaphor in literature ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Personal narratives ; History and criticism
    Abstract: As the epigraph to what would turn out to be his final book, Primo Levi chose a few lines from Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancient Mariner that lend impressive moral authority to the witness:Since then, at an uncertain hour,That agony returns,And till my ghastly tale is toldThis heart within me burns.1It is memory, of course, that visits this agony upon the mariner, the memory of having sinned first by felling the fateful albatross and then, all the worse, by surviving his fellow sailors after they paid the heavy price for his violent presumption. Thereafter, the mariner’s transgression overtakes him as a force unto itself, a Fury that he can neither predict nor control, a phantom of the mind that plunges him—in true Romantic form—into physical pain. His only relief takes the form of confessions that will (also with vintage Romantic defiance) imperil simple bourgeois happiness, robbing the wedding celebration of joy with the tale of his devastating (if entirely human) failure. In fact, Coleridge’s mariner does not so much tell his tale as find himself the vehicle for its searing truth, a mere—more or less helpless—medium of agonizing revelation. In return for bearing his agonizing truth so unconsciously, even selflessly, all the mariner can claim is a kind of helpless irreproachability, the ghosts that throng his burning heart and tongue comprising a veritable moral imperative.
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  • 7
    Article
    Article
    In:  Interpreting Primo Levi (2016) 97-112
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: Interpreting Primo Levi
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2016) 97-112
    Keywords: Levi, Primo, ; Jewish scientists ; Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism ; Literature and science
    Abstract: Primo Levi was not only a Holocaust survivor and witness, he was also an industrial chemist by trade and a lifelong apologist for science as a vital part of an integrated culture. Yet, though few scholars or critics fail to mention that he was a chemist, or to add that his profession helped to save his life in Auschwitz, Levi the scientist and advocate of science remains a surprisingly neglected subject, especially when we consider that it was the publication in 1984 of the English translation of The Periodic Table that first established him as an internationally significant writer. In part, this neglect is due to that very lack of comprehension between the humanities and the sciences (sadly, often more evident on the humanities side) which Levi attempted to overcome. For example, Nicholas Patruno, keenly concerned with the history of the Jews, reads the whole of the “Carbon” chapter of The Periodic Table as an extended metaphor on that theme, making the unexamined assumption that Levi cannot really be writing about organic chemistry, a subject in which Patruno himself clearly sees little intrinsic interest:Levi speaks of the “atom,” which, inserted as part of an architectural structure, is “subjected to complicated exchanges and balances”. By this he seems to mean the Jews and their history. … Levi’s description of how carbon is involved in the creation of wine and how it is stored in the human liver to be activated in exacerbated circumstances refers to how the Jews were destined to be abused and, in a sense, kept in reserve for those moments in history when the world needed to lash out at a scapegoat.
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: Interpreting Primo Levi
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2016) 115-127
    Keywords: Levi, Primo, Criticism and interpretation ; Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism ; Italian fiction Jewish authors ; History and criticism ; Smell in literature ; Smell Psychological aspects ; Memory in literature
    Abstract: Smell is a primary and primitive sense; it is our “chemical” sense, as the French geographer Jean-François Staszak states.1 The sense of smell begins with the contact between a molecule and a cell. The stimulus (a set of odorant molecules) is processed by the brain together with other information, both contextual (visual, tactile, and olfactory) and emotional.2 The brain, as the anthropologist Joël Candau explains, identifies, names and categorizes these pieces of information, creating an olfactory image.3 In this complex process, the data that an individual has stored during a lifetime produces olfactory traces. The social and cultural environment and the biography of the individual determine what these traces are. At the end of this “operation,” according to Candau, the stimulus “is codified in the long-term memory in the form of a new olfactory trace.”4 Therefore, individuals carry their own personal, subjective, and intimate olfactory cultures and memories. Two different persons can smell the same odor, but each one memorizes and collects different traces.
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: Interpreting Primo Levi
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2016) 7-20
    Keywords: Levi, Primo, Criticism and interpretation ; Améry, Jean Criticism and interpretation ; Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature ; Holocaust survivors Psychology
    Abstract: Primo Levi was the twentieth century’s preeminent witness—preeminent both in general and, more specifically, among the voices that sought to draw attention to the shape of its central disfiguring tragedy. Levi attained this position because, as Philip Roth wrote of him shortly after his death, he had “the moral stamina and intellectual poise of a twentieth century Titan:”1 Levi’s name will forever be associated with Auschwitz, where he was imprisoned between February 1944 and January 1945. Indeed, he himself later said that but for his time there he would probably not have become a writer.2 I find this hard to credit in view of his exceptional wisdom about life and the world even as early as his mid-20s, when he composed his memoir of Auschwitz, If This Is a Man.3
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  • 10
    Article
    Article
    In:  Interpreting Primo Levi (2016) 21-35
    Language: English
    Year of publication: 2016
    Titel der Quelle: Interpreting Primo Levi
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2016) 21-35
    Keywords: Levi, Primo, ; Holocaust survivors' writings History and criticism ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Philosophy ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Moral and ethical aspects
    Abstract: Primo Levi’s exact motives for writing his essay “The Grey Zone” (“La zona grigia,” 1986) are unknown. Although Levi gives us some indications as to his motivation when he writes “from many signs, it would seem that the time has come to explore the space which separates (and not only in the Nazi Lagers) the victims from the perpetrators, and to do so with a lighter hand, and with a less turbid spirit than has been done, for instance, in a number of films,”1 it is ultimately left up to Levi’s readers to examine his writings and to make a sensitive judgment as to the genesis of his concept of the “gray zone.” Following this method it becomes clear that Levi was uncomfortable with the reductiveness of the terms “good” and “evil.” It is true that Levi never rejected the absolute positions of good and evil and in fact makes use of them in recalling “the evil and insane SS men”2 or when describing the Italian laborer Lorenzo as a man with a “natural and plain manner of being good :”3 So to say that for Levi the notions of good and evil were reductive is not to say that they were redundant. What seems to have been dissatisfying for Levi was that the moral concepts of good and evil constituted the total linguistics and theoretical framework available for understanding the moral lives of the victims of Nazi rule.
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