ISBN:
9783110726435
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (X, 304 Seiten)
Year of publication:
2022
Series Statement:
Europäisch-jüdische Studien volume 54
Series Statement:
Beiträge
Series Statement:
Europäisch-jüdische Studien / Beiträge
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Peretz, Dekel, 1979 - Zionism and Cosmopolitanism
Dissertation note:
Dissertation Universität Potsdam 2020
Keywords:
Oppenheimer, Franz
;
Zionism History
;
Sociology History
;
Jews History
;
Kosmopolitismus
;
Oppenheimer, Franz
;
Palästina
;
Zionismus
;
Kolonialismus
;
HISTORY / Jewish
;
Anti-Semitism
;
Colonialism
;
Germany
;
Jewish identity
;
Zionism
;
Hochschulschrift
;
Oppenheimer, Franz 1864-1943
;
Zionismus
;
Weltbürgertum
;
Juden
;
Ethnische Identität
;
Antisemitismus
;
Deutschland
;
Kolonialismus
;
Palästina
;
Diskurs
;
Altneuland
;
Geschichte 1890-1918
Abstract:
Frontmatter -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Abbreviations -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 The Young Oppenheimer’s Utopian Horizon: Socialism, Darwinism and Rassenhygiene -- Chapter 2 Biology, Sociology and the Jews -- Chapter 3 Oppenheimer’s Path to Zionism -- Chapter 4 Altneuland – A German Colonial Journal -- Chapter 5 Altneuland’s Entanglement in German Racial and Colonial Discourses -- Chapter 6 When Fantasies Meet Realities -- Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Register
Abstract:
Franz Oppenheimer (1864-1943) was a prominent German sociologist, economist and Zionist activist. As a co-founder of academic sociology in Germany, Oppenheimer vehemently opposed the influence of antisemitism on the nascent field. As an expert on communal agricultural settlement, Oppenheimer co-edited the scientific Zionist journal Altneuland (1904-1906), which became a platform for a distinct Jewish participation within the racial and colonial discourses of Imperial Germany. By positioning Zionist aspirations within a German colonial narrative, Altneuland presented Zionism as an extension, instead of a rejection, of German patriotism. By doing so, the journal’s contributors hoped to recruit new supporters and model Zionism as a source of secular Jewish identity for German Jewry. While imagining future relationships between Jews, Arabs, and German settlers in Palestine, Oppenheimer and his contemporaries also reimagined the place of Jews among European nations
Note:
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
DOI:
10.1515/9783110726435
URL:
Cover
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