Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- “Ein weites Feld”: Ein Wort zu deutsch-jüdischen Studien anläβlich der Verleihung des ersten Egon Schwarz Prize for the Best Essay in German Jewish Studies
- “An Open Field”: A Word about German Jewish Studies on the Occasion of the Presentation of the first Egon Schwarz Prize for the Best Essay in German Jewish Studies
- Laudatio for Abigail Gillman's Prize-Winning Nexus Essay: “Martin Buber's Message to Postwar Germany”
- Heinrich Heine in Modern German History, by an Eyewitness
- Jeffrey Sammons, Heine, and Me: Some Autobiographical Reflections
- Heine's Disparate Legacies: A Response to Jeffrey Sammons
- My Debt to Heine and Sammons
- Die letzten Tage der Menschheit as a German-Jewish Tragicomedy, and the Challenge to Translators
- Edward Timms's “Die letzten Tage der Menschheit as a German-Jewish Tragicomedy and the Challenge to Translators”: A Response
- Kraus the Mouse? Kafka's Late Reading of Die Fackel and the Vagaries of Literary History
- The Parable of the Rings: Sigmund Freud Reads Lessing
- The Poetics of the Polis: Remarks on the Latency of the Literary in Hannah Arendt's Concept of Public Space
- The Marrano in Modernity: The Case of Karl Gutzkow
- German Jews Dogged by Destiny: Werewolves and Other Were-Canids in the Works of Heinrich Heine and Curt Siodmak
- Authenticity, Distance, and the East German Volksstück: Yiddish in Thomas Christoph Harlan's Ich Selbst und Kein Engel
Acknowledgements
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2017
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- “Ein weites Feld”: Ein Wort zu deutsch-jüdischen Studien anläβlich der Verleihung des ersten Egon Schwarz Prize for the Best Essay in German Jewish Studies
- “An Open Field”: A Word about German Jewish Studies on the Occasion of the Presentation of the first Egon Schwarz Prize for the Best Essay in German Jewish Studies
- Laudatio for Abigail Gillman's Prize-Winning Nexus Essay: “Martin Buber's Message to Postwar Germany”
- Heinrich Heine in Modern German History, by an Eyewitness
- Jeffrey Sammons, Heine, and Me: Some Autobiographical Reflections
- Heine's Disparate Legacies: A Response to Jeffrey Sammons
- My Debt to Heine and Sammons
- Die letzten Tage der Menschheit as a German-Jewish Tragicomedy, and the Challenge to Translators
- Edward Timms's “Die letzten Tage der Menschheit as a German-Jewish Tragicomedy and the Challenge to Translators”: A Response
- Kraus the Mouse? Kafka's Late Reading of Die Fackel and the Vagaries of Literary History
- The Parable of the Rings: Sigmund Freud Reads Lessing
- The Poetics of the Polis: Remarks on the Latency of the Literary in Hannah Arendt's Concept of Public Space
- The Marrano in Modernity: The Case of Karl Gutzkow
- German Jews Dogged by Destiny: Werewolves and Other Were-Canids in the Works of Heinrich Heine and Curt Siodmak
- Authenticity, Distance, and the East German Volksstück: Yiddish in Thomas Christoph Harlan's Ich Selbst und Kein Engel
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Nexus 3Essays in German Jewish Studies, pp. ix - xPublisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017