Jahrbuch Band 6 (2007)

Jahrbuch des Simon-Dubnow-Instituts /

Simon Dubnow Institute Yearbook VI (2007)

Schwerpunkt / Special Issue: Early Modern Culture and Haskalah

Hg. v. Dan Diner
1. Auflage 2007
560 Seiten mit 2 Abb., Leinen
69,90 € [D]
ISBN 978-3-525-36933-3

 

Inhalt

Dan Diner

Editorial

 

 

Special Issue / Schwerpunkt

 

Early Modern Culture and Haskalah - Reconsidering the Borderlines of Modern Jewish History

 

Edited by David B. Ruderman and Shmuel Feiner

 

Framing the Question

 

David B. Ruderman, Philadelphia

Introduction

 

Why Periodization Matters – On Early Modern Jewish Culture and Haskalah

 

Shmuel Feiner, Ramat Gan

On the Threshold of the “New World” –

Haskalah and Secularization in the Eighteenth Century

 

Italy and Sephardic Amsterdam: The Roots of Jewish Modernity

 

Adam Shear, Pittsburgh

“The Italian and Berlin Haskalah” –

Isaac Barzilay Revisited

 

Francesca Bregoli, Oxford

Jewish Modernity in Eighteenth-Century Italy –

A Historiographical Survey

 

Adam Sutcliffe, London

Imagining Amsterdam –

The Dutch Golden Age and the Origins of Jewish Modernity

 

Yosef Kaplan, Jerusalem

Secularizing the Portuguese Jews –

Integration and Orthodoxy in Early Modern Judaism

 

The Modernization of Ashkenazic Jewry: Language, textuality, and the Public Sphere

 

Shlomo Berger, Amsterdam

Yiddish on the Borderline of Modernity –

Language and Literature in Early Modern Ashkenazi Culture

 

Elchanan Reiner, Tel Aviv

Beyond the Realm of the Haskalah –

Changing Learning Patterns in Jewish Traditional Society

 

Pawel Maciejko, Jerusalem

The Jews’ Entry into the Public Sphere –

The Emden-Eibeschütz Controversy Reconsidered

 

Todd M. Endelman, Ann Arbor

Secularization and the Origins of Jewish Modernity –

On the Impact of Urbanization and Social Transformation

 

Andrea Schatz, Princeton

“Peoples Pure of Speech:”

The Religious, the Secular, and Jewish Beginnings of Modernity

 

Mysticism, Magic, and Modernity

 

J. H. Chajes, Haifa

Entzauberung and Jewish Modernity –

On “Magic,” Enlightenment, and Faith

 

Israel Bartal, Jerusalem

On Periodization, Mysticism, and Enlightenment –

The Case of Moses Hayyim Luzzatto

 

Moshe Rosman, Ramat Gan

Hasidism as a Modern Phenomenon –

The Paradox of Modernization Without Secularization

 

 

Political and Economic Indicators of Modernity

 

François Guesnet, Oxford

The Turkish Cavalry in Swarzedz, or:

Jewish Political Culture at the Borderlines of Modern History

 

Jonathan Karp, Binghamton

Economic History and Jewish Modernity –

Ideological Versus Structural Change

 

Allgemeiner Teil

 

Alexander Grab, Orono

Jewish Education in Napoleonic Italy –

The Case of the Ginnasio in Reggio Emilia

 

Bart Wallet, Amsterdam

Napoleon’s Legacy –

National Government and Jewish Community in Western Europe

 

Andrew Demshuk, Urbana-Champaign

“Wehmut und Trauer” –

Jewish Travelers in Polish Silesia and the Foreignness of Heimat

 

Dubnowiana

Grit Jilek, Leipzig

»Alle Wege sind mir versperrt« –

Simon Dubnows Brief aus Riga, März 1941

 

 

Historiker und andere Gelehrte

Andreas Lehnardt, Mainz

Geschichte und Individuum –

Nachman Krochmals More Nevukhe ha-Zeman

 

Aleksandra Pawliczek, Berlin

Zwischen Anerkennung und Ressentiment –

Der jüdische Mediävist Harry Bresslau (1848–1926)

 

Kerstin Armborst, Mainz

Wegbereiter der Geschichtsforschung –

Über den Vorstand der Jüdischen Historisch-Ethnographischen

Gesellschaft in St. Petersburg

 

Laura Jockusch, Leipzig

Khurbn Forshung

Jewish Historical Commissions in Europe, 1943–1949

 

Aus der Forschung

Lutz Fiedler, Leipzig

Habsburger Verlängerungen –

Imperienkonzepte im Werk Hans Kohns

 

 

Literaturbericht

Stefan Litt, Jerusalem

Pinkassei Kahal aschkenasischer Gemeinden 1500–1800:

 

Eine Gesamtsicht

 

Abstracts

 

Contributors

 

  Home  |  Impressum  |  Kontakt