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Germanjewish Popular Culture Before The Holocaust Kafkas Kitsch Routledge Jewish Studies Series 1st Edition David Brenner

  • SKU: BELL-2140176
Germanjewish Popular Culture Before The Holocaust Kafkas Kitsch Routledge Jewish Studies Series 1st Edition David Brenner
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Germanjewish Popular Culture Before The Holocaust Kafkas Kitsch Routledge Jewish Studies Series 1st Edition David Brenner instant download after payment.

Publisher: Routledge
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.06 MB
Pages: 129
Author: David Brenner
ISBN: 0415463238, 9780415463232
Language: English
Year: 2008
Edition: 1

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Germanjewish Popular Culture Before The Holocaust Kafkas Kitsch Routledge Jewish Studies Series 1st Edition David Brenner by David Brenner 0415463238, 9780415463232 instant download after payment.

David A. Brenner examines how Jews in Central Europe developed one of the first "ethnic" or "minority" cultures in modernity. Not exclusively "German" or "Jewish," the experiences of German-speaking Jewry in the decades prior to the Third Reich and the Holocaust were also negotiated in encounters with popular culture, particularly the novel, the drama and mass media. Despite recent scholarship, the misconception persists that Jewish Germans were bent on assimilation. Although subject to compulsion, they did not become solely "German," much less "European." Yet their behavior and values were by no means exclusively "Jewish," as the Nazis or other anti-Semites would have it. Rather, the German Jews achieved a peculiar synthesis between 1890 and 1933, developing a culture that was not only "middle-class" but also "ethnic." In particular, they reinvented Judaic traditions by way of a hybridized culture. Based on research in German, Israeli and American archives, German-Jewish Popular Culture before the Holocaust addresses many of the genres in which a specifically German-Jewish identity was performed, from the Yiddish theatre and Zionist humour all the way to sensationalist memoirs and Kafka’s own kitsch. This middle-class ethnic identity encompassed and went beyond religious confession and identity politics. In focusing principally on German-Jewish popular culture, this groundbreaking book introduces the beginnings of "ethnicity" as we know it and live it today.

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