Using modern social theory, David Brenner examines how German-Jewish identity was influenced by the production and consumption of popular culture.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
David A. Brenner is Director of the Houston Teachers Institute and Visiting Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Houston.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction: Identifying (with) German Jewish Popular Culture 1. Between High and Low, Laughter and Tears: Making Yiddish Theater "Respectable" in Turn of the Century Jewish Berlin 2. "Schlemiel, Shlimazel": A Proto Postcolonialist Satire of "Jews," "Blacks," and "Germans" 3. A German Jewish Hermaphrodite Or: What Sexology Contributed to B'nai B'rith 4. Franz's Folk(lore): Kafka's Jewish Father Complex 5. Pogrom in Berlin? Working Through the Weimar Jewish Experience in Popular Fiction 6. After the "Schoah": Performing German Jewish Symbiosis Today
Introduction: Identifying (with) German Jewish Popular Culture 1. Between High and Low, Laughter and Tears: Making Yiddish Theater "Respectable" in Turn of the Century Jewish Berlin 2. "Schlemiel, Shlimazel": A Proto Postcolonialist Satire of "Jews," "Blacks," and "Germans" 3. A German Jewish Hermaphrodite Or: What Sexology Contributed to B'nai B'rith 4. Franz's Folk(lore): Kafka's Jewish Father Complex 5. Pogrom in Berlin? Working Through the Weimar Jewish Experience in Popular Fiction 6. After the "Schoah": Performing German Jewish Symbiosis Today
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