1st Edition

German Jewry Its History and Sociology

By Joseph B. Maier Copyright 1988
    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    This history of post-Emancipation German Jewry and of the Holocaust aftermath has received considerable scholarly attention. The study of Jewish life in Germany in the 1930s and the migration impelled by the Nazi period has, on the other hand, been comparatively neglected. The work of Werner J. Cahnman (1902-1980) goes a long way toward filling this gap.Cahnman's examination of "the Jewish people that dwells among the nations" is focused on Germany because it was the country "where in modern times the symbiosis . . . has been most intimate and it also has been the country where the conflict degenerated into the monstrosity of the Holocaust." This representative anthology of his essays shares a common theme, although the examples differ in thought, method and style. Whether he explores the stratification of pre-Emancipation German Jewry, the rise of the Jewish national movement in Austria, or such an esoteric topic as the influence of the kabbalistic tradition on German idealist philosophy; whether he muses on the writing of Jewish history or reports on his firsthand experience in Dachau, Cahnman's work reflects central concerns of his personal and scholarly existence as a German Jew. Because he usually combined extensive empirical data with his own background and personal experience, he is able to craft a penetrating analysis of the recent history of Jewish life in Central Europe. Werner Cahnman believed that the "writing of history is vital for the continued cultural identity of the human kind."

    Part I. A New Approach to German-Jewish History 1. The Three Regions of German-Jewish History 3 2. Pariahs, Strangers, and Court Jews 15 3. The Role and Significance of the Jewish Artisan Class 29 4. Village and Small-Town Jews in Germany 43 5. The Socioeconomic Causes of Antisemitism 69 Part II. Community and Family History 6. The Decline of the Munich Jewish Community, 1933-38 83 7. The Jews of Munich: 1918-43 Annotated and Translated from the German by Judith Marcus 97 8. In the Dachau Concentration Camp: An Autobiographical Essay 151 Part III. Profiles in Jewish Courage and Vision 9. Scholar and Visionary: The Correspondence between Theodor Herzl and Ludwig Gumplowicz 161 10. The Life of Clementine Kraemer 175 11. Martin Buber: A Reminiscence 201 Part IV. Reflections on the German-Jewish Symbiosis, 12. Friedrich Wilhelm Schelling and the New Thinking of Judaism.

    Biography

    Joseph B. Maier (Author)