תקציר
The decline of the emancipation of the German Jews in the early 1930s and its ending under the Nazi regime motivated their various spokesmen to reevaluate their past, by discussing the heritage of the major emancipation heroes. Based mostly on the Jewish press, which was quite free to handle an internal Jewish dialogue until 1938, the article examines the representations of Moses Mendelssohn, David Friedländer, Rahel Varnhagen, Heinrich Heine and Gabriel Riesser in the Jewish public of this time. It demonstrates how spokesmen of the major German-Jewish political camps - the liberals, the Zionists and the Orthodox - referred to these figures in different ways in their effort to create a useful past for their readers. Thus, whereas radical Zionist and Orthodox Jews presented Mendelssohn's legacy as the beginning of the process of assimilation which was doomed to fail, others, who were mostly but not only liberals, portrayed a much more positive Mendelssohn. For them, Mendelssohn did not demonstrate the roots of the 1930s German-Jewish decline, but rather the sources of its potential recovery. Friedländer, Varnhagen and Heine were frequently mentioned as betrayers of Jewish honour, but certain spokesmen referred to them differently. Riesser, whose nineteenth-century heroic struggle for emancipation seemed in the 1930s to be a total failure, was still embraced by certain Jewish liberals as a hero who did the best for his time. The article also shows how the escalation of the late 1930s moderated internal Jewish historical polemics, almost creating a Jewish consensus about the past.
שפה מקורית | אנגלית |
---|---|
עמודים (מ-עד) | 476-504 |
מספר עמודים | 29 |
כתב עת | German History |
כרך | 21 |
מספר גיליון | 4 |
מזהי עצם דיגיטלי (DOIs) | |
סטטוס פרסום | פורסם - 2003 |
פורסם באופן חיצוני | כן |
הערה ביבליוגרפית
Funding Information:Schlrlyoaaswell aspuibnreltoiesGcfetarn JmweintshrJeweianids,h speciŽ cal,linytheir German-Jewish past did not oriignte in athe 1s9In.f3act, 0 the pioneers of modern Jewish historiograypŽ rst,hin the Society for the Culture and Science of the Jews (Verein für Kultruund Wissenshacft dJuden)er which was fonudin Beerlindin Novmbere1,8and1th9itenhmnodernerab-binical seminars, oriignted inanineteenth-century Germany4 A.ttptsetomcon-nect images from the Jewish past to conmporatery situatinoofsGerman Jews also appreed in athe nineteenth century—Jewish historians participated in Jewish internal politics, referred to the probslofeEmmancipation, and took part in the struggalgaeitnsantsseimitism.5 Furthermore, the process of adaptignthe Jewish identity in Germany to the values and the aesthetics of the German Entlnmeeignt BihlgdidulwaenacsacpaniedobmayreitingwortfhJwee ish past and a reshaping of the Jewish memory in accordance with thidil6s.ea Public interest in this process reached its peak during the period of the secdon Reich.Historicalprobslweerediscussedm moreintensiyinvtheeJewishl press; new asosiationsc began to teach and diinatessJewishehistorymin the wider Jewish public; and research activity became more diverse.7 This process was highly in uenced by the academic and public discourse of the entreiGerman
RAMBI publications
- rambi
- Mendelssohn, Moses -- 1729-1786
- Friedländer, David -- 1750-1834
- Varnhagen, Rahel -- 1771-1833
- Heine, Heinrich -- 1797-1856
- Jews -- Germany -- History -- 1800-2000