Theodor Herzl: From Europe to Zion

Front Cover
Mark H. Gelber, Vivian Liska
Walter de Gruyter, Jan 19, 2012 - History - 256 pages

This book-series, initiated in 1992, has an interdisciplinary orientation; it is published in English and German and comprises research monographs, collections of essays and editions of source texts dealing with German-Jewish literary and cultural history, in particular from the period covering the 18th to 20th centuries.

The closer definition of the term German-Jewish applied to literature and culture is an integral part of its historical development. Primarily, the decisive factor is that from the middle of the 18th century German gradually became the language of choice for Jews, and Jewish authors started writing in German, rather than Yiddish or Hebrew, even when they were articulating Jewish themes. This process is directly connected an historical change in mentality and social factors which led to a gradual opening towards a non-Jewish environment, which in its turn was becoming more open. In the Enlightenment, German society becomes the standard of reference – initially for an intellectual elite. Against this background, the term German-Jewish literature refers to the literary work of Jewish authors writing in German to the extent that explicit or implicit Jewish themes, motifs, modes of thought or models can be identified in them.
From the beginning of the 19th century at the latest, however, the image of Jews in the work of non-Jewish writers, determined mainly by anti-Semitism, becomes a factor in German-Jewish literature. There is a tension between Jewish writers’ authentic reference to Jewish traditions or existence and the anti-Semitic marking and discrimination against everything Jewish which determines the overall development of the history of German-Jewish literature and culture. This series provides an appropriate forum for research into the whole problematic area.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Between Myth and Messianism
7
Is it Ethnic or Civic?
23
Zionism as Personal Liberation
43
Leaders 1904 Masaryk Herzl Kafka
57
ReImagining Herzl and other Zionist Sex Symbols
73
Herzl Zionist Culture and the Great African Adventure
85
Dieses schlicht verschwiegene Bekenntnis Gustav G Cohen ein unbekannter Freund Theodor Herzls
103
What Will People Say? Herzl as Author of Comedies
149
A Vision out of Sight Theodor Herzls Late Philosophical Tales
161
Genre Issues and Mythic Perspectives
173
Der Wandernde Jude Herzl und der Zionismus auf der Leinwand
189
The Politics of Genre in Theodor Herzl and H N Bialik
201
Mythic Figure or Flesh and Blood? The Literary Reception of Herzl in Hebrew Poetry and in Nathan Bistritzkis The Secret of Birth
221
George Taboris Subversive Herzl Variation
235
List of Contributors
245

Transfiguration of the Self in Herzls Life and in his Fiction
115
Theodor Herzl and the Crisis of Jewish SelfUnderstanding
129

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About the author (2012)

Mark H. Gelber, Ben-Gurion University, Israel; Vivian Liska, University of Antwerpen, Belgium.

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