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  • Online Resource  (35)
  • Synagoge  (17)
  • Autobiografie
  • Exil
  • Judenvernichtung
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  • 1
    ISBN: 9783657790920
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (IX, 310 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2023
    Series Statement: War (hi)stories vol. 12
    Series Statement: War (hi)stories
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als War and remembrance ; 1: World War II and the Holocaust in the memory politics of post-socialist Europe
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Historiography ; Social change Research ; Social sciences Research ; Konferenzschrift ; Osteuropa ; Judenvernichtung ; Zweiter Weltkrieg ; Kollektives Gedächtnis
    Abstract: Providing a comprehensive and engaging account of World War II remembrance and memory politics in East-Central and Eastern Europe this volume uses a comparative approach to examine the phenomena of cultural memory in a pan-European overview. Ranging in scope from various post-Soviet states such as Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Estonia, and Georgia to the East-Central and South-Eastern European post-socialist countries of Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia, and Croatia, this book provides new insights into the ways in which World War II remembrance is reflected in the memory politics, historical studies, culture and literature of the respective countries. The volume focuses mostly on state memory narratives and their public reception as well as museums, memorials and monuments as controversial objects of cultural memory
    Note: "international conference 'World War II and the Holocaust in the Memory Politics and Public Historical Discourses of East-Central and Eastern Europe after 1989/1991', held in Kiel, Germany, on 27–28 September 2019" - Seite viii , Literaturangaben , English
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9789004544109
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XIII, 310 Seiten) , Karten, Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2023
    Series Statement: Yearbook of the Research Centre for German and Austrian exile studies volume 22
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Music and exile
    RVK:
    Keywords: National socialism and music History 20th century ; Jewish composers Social conditions 20th century ; Jewish refugees Social conditions 20th century ; Expatriate musicians Social conditions 20th century ; Music Social aspects 20th century ; History ; Jews Migrations ; Music History and criticism 20th century ; Jews Music ; History and criticism ; Europe Emigration and immigration 20th century ; History ; United States Emigration and immigration 20th century ; History ; Australia Emigration and immigration 20th century ; History ; China Emigration and immigration 20th century ; History ; Neue Musik ; Auswanderung ; Musiksoziologie ; Nationalsozialismus ; Deutschland ; Judenverfolgung ; Exil ; Komponist ; Juden ; Musik ; Spoliansky, Mischa 1898-1985 ; Goldschmidt, Berthold 1903-1996 ; Granichstaedten, Bruno 1879-1944
    Abstract: "How did exiled musicians from Germany and Austria, who reached safety at Kitchener Camp in Britain, find themselves in an Australian internment camp in New South Wales in 1940? What were the institutions that helped Jewish refugee musicians survive in wartime Shanghai? What happened to Austrian musicians who were trapped in the Netherlands after the German occupation? These and other questions, and the larger stories they refer to, form the compelling content of this book. Other topics include the struggle of the Vienna operetta composers Granichstaedten and Katscher in USA, the relationship of émigré composer Berthold Goldschmidt to his native Hamburg and the reception of his 'exile opera' Beatrice Cenci. Studies of Mischa Spoliansky's music for the movie Mr. Emmanuel (1944) and Franz Reizenstein's radio opera Anna Kraus form part of the fourteen essays on exile musical history in Britain, Europe, USA, Australia and the Far East, based on cutting edge archival research and interviews by leading scholars"--
    Description / Table of Contents: Music and Exile : From 1933 to the Present Day / Malcolm Miller and Jutta Raab Hansen -- The Musical Identity of the Austrian Exile / Michael Haas -- An Ambiguous Story - Austrian Music Exile in the Netherlands / Primavera Driessen Gruber -- Vom Kitchener Camp in australische Wüstenlager : Der Weg jüdischer Exil-Musiker über Grossbritannien nach Down Under / Albrecht Dümling -- Creation of Jobs, Union Work and Cooperation : The Institutionalisation of Musical Life by the European Jewish Artist Society, the Shanghai Musicians Association, and the Association of Jewish Precentors in the Shanghai Exile, 1938-49 / Sophie Fetthauer -- 'A State of Crass Ideological Confusion' : Avant-Garde Music and Antisemitism in the Free German League of Culture / Florian Scheding -- 'Almost as Impressive as Its Legacy in the Visual Arts' : Ben Uri Art Society and Music in Exile, 1931-60 / Rachel Dickson -- Goldschmidt and Hamburg / Peter Petersen -- Preisgekrönt und doch kein Glück? Anmerkungen zu Berthold Goldschmidts Belcanto-Oper Beatrice Cenci / Barbara Busch -- 'A Place of Refuge in Your Arms' : Reizenstein's Anna Kraus as Holocaust Opera / Malcolm Miller -- Von grossen Erfolgen in der Zwischenkriegszeit zu relativer Vergessenheit : Die Komponisten Bruno Granichstaedten und Robert Katscher im Exil / Hanja Dämon -- Encounters with the Émigré Experience : Discovering the Chamber Music and Songs of Peter Gellhorn / Norbert Meyn -- Visits in Four Cities : Stations in the Musical and Familial Life of the Song Composer Max Kowalski (1882-1956) / Nils Neubert -- Der österreichische Musiker Ferdinand Rauter als Musiktherapeut in Camphill bei Aberdeen in Schottland (1945 bis 1947) / Jutta Raab Hansen -- Mischa Spoliansky's Music for the Movie Mr. Emmanuel (1944) / Jörg Thunecke.
    Note: Includes index , Beiträge englisch und deutsch
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9783657703111
    Language: German
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XVIII, 260 Seiten) , Illustrationen, 1 Karte
    Year of publication: 2023
    Uniform Title: Marsh zhizni
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Gerasimova, Inna Marsch des Lebens
    RVK:
    Keywords: Jewish History & Culture ; Belarus ; Judenvernichtung ; Kiselev, Nikolaj Jakovlevič 1913-1974 ; Partisan ; Dolginovo ; Rettung ; Juden ; Zweiter Weltkrieg
    Abstract: Dieses bewegende Buch ist das Ergebnis einer einzigartigen historischen Spurensuche: Inna Gerasimova beschreibt als präzise Chronistin exemplarisch das Schicksal weißrussischer Jüdinnen und Juden während der nationalsozialistischen Besetzung des Landes. Dafür verwendet sie auch zahlreiche Zeitzeugenberichte, die das damalige Geschehen lebendiger nachvollziehbar machen als Überblickswerke und Statistiken es können. Der kommunistische Kommissar und Partisan Nikolaj Kiselëv wagte im August 1942 den Versuch, über 200 jüdische Menschen aus dem Dorf Dolginovo mehr als 1.500 Kilometer durch von den Deutschen besetztes Gebiet zu führen – nach Osten, hinter die rettende Frontlinie auf sowjetisch kontrolliertes Gebiet. Für dieses riskante Unterfangen wird er heute in Yad Vashem als ein „Gerechter unter den Völkern“ geehrt. Was veranlasste Kiselëv zu seinem Entschluss und wie verlief dieser von ihm organsierte „Marsch des Lebens“? Welches Schicksal widerfuhr denen, die sich auf den Weg machten? Wie wurde Kiselëv in der Sowjetunion nach dem Krieg beurteilt und wie sah sein weiteres Leben aus? Inna Gerasimova, langjährige Leiterin des Museums für jüdische Geschichte und Kultur Weißrusslands in Minsk, gibt Antwort auf diese Fragen
    Note: German
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9789004684645
    Language: French
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XII, 264 pages) , illustrations
    Year of publication: 2024
    Series Statement: Francopolyphonies volume 34
    Series Statement: Literature and Cultural Studies E-Books Online, Collection 2024
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Anna Langfus, la Shoah, le silence et la voix
    RVK:
    Keywords: Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in literature ; Literary criticism ; Essays ; Langfus, Anna 1920-1966 ; Judenvernichtung
    Abstract: Anna Langfus a contribué à un renouvellement majeur de la littérature de la Shoah, qui, avant ses publications, était largement dominée par le récit du témoin. Elle est l’auteure de pièces de théâtre et de trois romans : Le Sel et le soufre (1960), Les Bagages de sable (1962), lauréat du prix Goncourt, et Saute, Barbara (1965). Bien qu’ayant vécu les horreurs du génocide, elle n’a pas exprimé sa souffrance par l’autobiographie. Dans son œuvre elle explore, sans pathos, la tragédie des survivants atteints par ce qu’elle appelle « la maladie de la guerre ». Ce livre étudie, entre autres, la spécificité des textes de Langfus. Ecrits à une époque où prévalait l’ethos de la victimisation, de la repentance et parfois du manichéisme, ils nous invitent à tenir à distance toute idéalisation ou fausse consolation. Anna Langfus participated in a major renewal of Holocaust literature which had been mainly testimonial and witness-focused prior to her publications. She is the author of theater plays and of three novels: Le Sel et le soufre (1960), Les Bagages de sable (1962), awarded with the Prix Goncourt, and Saute, Barbara (1965). She experienced the horrors of the Holocaust, but she refused to express her grief through autobiography. Through her work she explores, without pathos , the tragedy of those who survived, and what Anna Langfus herself calls “la maladie de la guerre”: the war disease. This books examines, among other issues, the specificity of Langfus’s texts. Written at a time when an ethos of victimization, repentance, and sometimes Manichaeism was dominant, Langfus’s they urge us to keep any form of idealization or false consolation at a distance
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Front Matter -- Preliminary Material -- Copyright Page -- Notes sur les contributeurs -- Introduction : Anna Langfus, la Shoah, le silence et la voix / , French
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  • 5
    Language: German
    Pages: 31 Seiten , Illustrationen , 21 cm
    Year of publication: 1952
    Keywords: Stuttgart ; Synagoge
    Note: Online-Ausgabe: Berlin: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, 2019. - Digitalisierungsvorlage 〈II.9.1. Stutt 135〉 , Rechte vorbehalten - Freier Zugang. - Wahrnehmung der Rechte durch die VG WORT (§ 51 VGG)
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  • 6
    Language: German
    Pages: 56 Seiten
    Edition: 2. Auflage
    Year of publication: 1854
    Keywords: Hamburg ; Synagoge ; Gottesdienst ; Rabbiner
    Note: Online-Ausg.: Berlin: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, 2019. - Digitalisierungsvorlage 〈III.7. Hambu 1754〉 , Gemeinfrei - Freier Zugang
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Frankfurt a. M. : Verlag von Englert & Schlosser
    Language: German
    Pages: [29] Blatt , Illustrationen , 19,5 x 25,8 cm
    Year of publication: 1911
    Keywords: Frankfurt am Main ; Synagoge ; Provenienz: Archival Depot Offenbach a. M. Stempel
    Note: Ex. 300/500 , Online-Ausgabe: Berlin: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, 2019. - Digitalisierungsvorlage 〈II.9.1. Frank 113〉 , Gemeinfrei - Freier Zugang
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  • 8
    Language: German
    Pages: 203 [handschriftlich nummerierte] Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 1845
    Keywords: Autobiografie ; Handschrift ; Kalligraphie ; Haskala ; Provenienz: Lippmann, Georg Stempel ; Provenienz: Rosenstein, A. Autogramm
    Abstract: [iii], 203, [lxviii] = 272 pages (100 blank) (8 3/8 x 5 1/4 in.; 213 x 133 mm) on paper; contemporary pagination in ink (pp. 3-117, 120-125) and modern pagination in pencil (pp. 118-119, 126-203) in Arabic numerals; written in multiple elegant German and Hebrew square and cursive scripts in black ink; lightly ruled in pencil; Hebrew sometimes vocalized; no catchwords. Enlarged chapter headings; manicules on pp. [i] and [iii]; architectural title page on p. [ii] featuring pillars supporting an archway with a flower vase beneath; frames of most pages painted yellow, gold, blue, or green; numerous illustrations and decorations frequently throughout. Scattered light staining and foxing intermittently throughout; small amounts of paint chipped; ink seeps through on several pages; pp. [ii] and 3 reinforced along gutter. Modern quarter leather marbled binding; gilt title, date, and author name on spine; spine in six compartments with raised bands. Housed in a slipcase with identical marbled design. David Joseph Curländer, born January 16, 1752, in Hasenpoth, Courland (present-day Aizpute, Latvia), was a Jewish calligrapher and illustrator who lived most of his adult life as a bachelor in Berlin. The present manuscript, which was completed when he was almost 93 years old, contains unpublished autobiographical material that provides insight into the author’s life and times at the height of the Berlin Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment). In addition, this codex is beautifully calligraphed and illustrated, demonstrating Curländer’s professional skill and virtuosity. Curländer created this Taschenbuch (pocketbook) as a type of almanac in the Biedermeier mode “for my worthy students, friends, and forgiving readers,” as he writes on the title page. His artistry is evident in the book’s calligraphy, illustrations, and portraits, which are so skillfully executed that one could, at times, easily mistake them for prints. The author uses multiple German (Fraktur, Antiqua, and Kurrent) and Hebrew (square, cursive, and Rashi) scripts for the text of the codex (pp. 101, 118-119 seem to model his own original German cursive font) and paints numerous illustrations in vibrant colors that further enhance the visual appeal of the work. From the time he arrived in Berlin in February 1781, Curländer made the acquaintance of many of the city’s Jewish luminaries, including Hirsch Loebel Levin (1721-1800), chief rabbi of Berlin; Solomon Maimon (1753-1800), a fellow Eastern European immigrant who became a prominent philosopher; Sara Levy (1761-1854), Henriette Herz (1764-1847), and Amalie Beer (1767-1854), the heads of some of the most famous Berlin literary salons; and several other important figures in the Berlin Haskalah: Daniel Itzig (1723-1799) and his son Elias (1756–1818), Benjamin Veitel Ephraim (1742-1811), David Friedlaender (1750-1834), Aaron Halle-Wolfssohn (1754/1756-1835), Baruch Lindau (1759-1849), and Abraham Mendelssohn (1776-1835), the son of Moses Mendelssohn (1729-1786). He taught the children of many of these personalities calligraphy and drew especially close to the Herz and Beer families, who, together with Sara Levy, became his most devoted patrons. (Henriette Herz enabled him to attend the famous Jüdische Freischule Berlin and sponsored drawing lessons for him at the Royal Prussian Academy of the Arts, while the Beer family helped him join the Gesselschaft der Freunde, a local Jewish mutual aid society, in 1795.) In his time teaching the Beer children, Curländer grew especially close to one of Amalie’s sons, Jacob Liebmann, who would later, under the name Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791-1864), go on to become a famous composer. Indeed, Curländer includes in the Taschenbuch a portrait of Meyerbeer in pencil (p. 126), two anecdotes about him (pp. 127-128), and reproductions of posters advertising several of Meyerbeer’s operas (pp. 129-130, 198-199): Il crociato in Egitto (1824), Robert le diable (1831), Les Huguenots (1836), and Ein Feldlager in Schlesien (1844). Also included is a poster (p. 130) for a play by Meyerbeer’s brother, Michael Beer (1800–1833): Schwert und Hand (1835); as well as a copy of a letter (pp. 131-135) written by Curländer to the Beer family thanking them for their friendship and financial support over the years. Important historical events also find their way into the manuscript. Having lived through the Napoleonic Wars, Curländer devotes a number of pages to that subject, including a portrait of Napoleon in pencil (p. 152) and five related poems: “Die Pseudo-Kameraden” (p. 124), “Die jüdische Rekruten” (p. 125), “Naumann” (p. 136), “Die letzten 10. vom vierten Regiment” (pp. 137-139), and “Die nächtliche Heerschau” (pp. 153-155). He also reproduces a newspaper article reporting on the attempted assassination in Berlin of King Frederick William IV of Prussia (1795-1861) and his wife on July 26, 1844 (pp. 142-143). The literary sections of the text include original pieces by Curländer himself, as well as works by Friedrich Schiller (p. 3), Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (pp. 5, 107), Ludwig Rellstab (pp. 97-100), Johann Gaudenz von Salis-Seewis (p. 104), Wilhelm Gottlieb Becker (pp. 105-106), Karl August Engeldhardt (pseudonym: Richard Roos) (p. 114), Martin Luther (p. 119), and Joseph Christian Freiherr von Zedlitz (pp. 153-155), demonstrating Curländer’s extensive familiarity with general German culture. He also quotes the writings of David Friedlaender (pp. 119, 140, 145) and reproduces Moses Mendelssohn’s German translation of Psalm 71, facing the Hebrew original in the frame of an open psalter, on four illuminated pages (175-178) of the Taschenbuch, indicating his indebtedness to, and longterm association with, the Berlin Haskalah. In fact, the Psalms translation is preceded by a portrait of Mendelssohn in pencil (p. 174) and followed by an excerpt (transliterated into Hebrew characters in Rashi script) from an autobiographical letter the famous philosopher penned to Johann Jacob Spieß on March 1, 1774 (p. 178). The text also has a light side to it. In a four-page spread, set in the frame of the periodical Die Stafette (The Courier), Curländer transcribes a humorous dialogue between himself and a younger calligraphy teacher lamenting the “spirit of the time” (pp. 146-149). Elsewhere in the Taschenbuch (p. 171), he draws a theater poster for a play entitled Der alte Junggeselle (The Old Bachelor), based on a novella by Paul de Kock, with himself cast in the title role. And in between the various autobiographical segments of the text, he sprinkles sheet music (pp. 110-113, 150-151), humorous proverbs (pp. 114-115, 122-123), puzzles (pp. 116-117), and other textual and pictorial elements (pp. 108-109, 118-119, 166-167) that highlight his artistry and playfulness. The last two documents in the manuscript contain the text of a request by Curländer to the Prussian King, penned October 15, 1844, to include the artwork that he had created over the course of his career (including the present Taschenbuch) in the royal art collection (pp. 200-201), followed by a copy of the response, dated January 2, 1845, in which his request was denied (pp. 201-202). All in all, the manuscript before us is a masterpiece of calligraphic and artistic achievement by an experienced virtuoso that includes fascinating information of particular interest to historians of both the Biedermeier period and of the Berlin Haskalah. pp. i-32 (frontmatter plus Chapters 1-21): introductory remarks by the author, title page, poems, a list of some of the most prominent among the author’s students over the course of his long career, and autobiographical narrative about his youth, arrival in Berlin, and the beginning of his employment. pp. 33-96 (Chapters 22-75): a tragic narrative about a Jewish mother and her children living in Berlin, whom Curländer had supported financially for many years (1828–1844) without receiving any compensation from the children’s non-Jewish father. The section is bookended (pp. 35, 96) by illustrations of the Ten Commandments in Hebrew and German with a hand raised in oath and God’s watchful eye above, as if the author were solemnly affirming the veracity of everything included herein. On p. 102, Curländer drew a portrait of one of the children, his beloved Marie Emilie Wilhelmine (Minna) Hoffmann (1823-1841), in life, followed on p. 103 by a sketch of her tombstone at the Luisenstadt Cemetery in Berlin. An introductory note on p. [i] actually asks the reader to skip over these pages entirely unless he receives permission to read them directly from the author. pp. 97-202: miscellaneous documents, illustrations, portraits, anecdotes, poems, proverbs, puzzles, epigrams, and pictures related to Curländer’s autobiography.
    Note: Online-Ausg.: Berlin: Jüdisches Museum Berlin, 2019. - Digitalisierungsvorlage 〈IV. Curlä 4185〉 , Gemeinfrei - Freier Zugang
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  • 9
    Language: German
    Year of publication: 2007
    Series Statement: [Veranstaltungsabteilung des Jüdischen Museums Berlin] Veranstaltungen 070329
    Series Statement: Veranstaltungen
    Keywords: Deutschland (Bundesrepublik) ; Deutschland (DDR) ; Exil ; Rückkehr ; Juden
    Abstract: Von den knapp 300.000 jüdischen Flüchtlingen und Emigranten sind vermutlich nicht mehr als einige Tausend nach Deutschland zurückgekommen. In der Bundesrepublik haben sie die argumentativen Brücken zwischen den jüdischen Überlebenden und der Nachkriegsgesellschaft geschlagen, in der DDR halfen viele von ihnen, das sozialistische Deutschland aufzubauen. Nicht selten begegnete man ihnen mit Ressentiments und Vorbehalten, sowohl von jüdischer als auch von nichtjüdischer Seite. Teilnehmer des Podiumsgesprächs sind Söhne, Töchter und eine Enkelin von jüdischen Flüchtlingen, deren Eltern nach dem 2. Weltkrieg nach Deutschland zurückgekehrt sind. Als Teilnehmer haben zugesagt: Daniel Cohn-Bendit, Eva Gruenstein-Neuman, Yael Kupferberg, Ronny Loewy, Irene Runge und Julius Schoeps.
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  • 10
    Language: German
    Pages: 34 Seiten
    Year of publication: 2005
    Keywords: Vöhl ; Synagoge ; Kunst ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Bei der Restaurierung des blauen, goldbestirnten Himmels der Vöhler Synagoge im Herbst 2003 mussten etliche Bretter abgenommen werden. Sie waren durch Holzwurmbefall oder die Einwirkung von Feuchtigkeit so zerstört, dass nur ein Ersatz durch neue Bretter in Frage kam. Auf Brettfragmenten blieben 18 Sterne erhalten. Sie bildeten das Ausgangsmaterial für die Vöhler Ausstellung “Kunst aus Sternenbrettern – Shtil, di Nacht iz Oysgeshternt”. Im Mai und Juni 2005 wurden die Kunstwerke in der Synagoge Vöhl erstmals ausgestellt.
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