Корично изображение Електронна книга

A history of East European Jews /

Presents a history of East European Jewry from its beginnings to the period after the Holocaust. It gives an overview of the demographic, political, socio-economic, religious and cultural conditions of Jewish communities in Poland, Russia, Bohemia and Moravia. Interesting themes include the story of...

Пълно описание

Основен автор: Haumann, Heiko, 1945-
Формат: Електронна книга
Език: English
German
Публикувано: Budapest ; New York : Central European University Press, 2002.
Предмети:
Онлайн достъп: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=85998
Подобни документи: Print version:: History of East European Jews.
Съдържание:
  • PART I. POLAND AS A PLACE OF REFUGE FOR JEWS
  • Polish Princes' offer of protection from persectution
  • Opponents of the Jews
  • Economic success
  • Social structure and self-administration of the Jews
  • Learning and culture
  • Jews as intermediaries between town and country
  • Golden age for the Jews in Poland?
  • PART II. EAST EUROPEAN JEWRY AS A 'CULTURAL PATTERN OF LIFE' IN EASTERN EUROPE
  • Catastrophe of 1648
  • Consequences of the catastrophe
  • Kabbala
  • Messiah in Poland: Shabtai Tsevi and Jacob Frank
  • Popular piety of Hasidism
  • Origins of the Ostjuden
  • 'Shtetl'
  • Contacts between Jews and non-Jews: Jewish peddlers and innkeepers
  • Symbiosis diminishes
  • Jews in the partitions of Poland
  • Reaction of the Jews to the new political, intellectual, and religious conditions
  • Tsarist empire and the Jews
  • East European Jews outside Tsarist rule
  • PART III. THE CRISIS OF THE JEWS IN EASTERN EUROPE A NEW IDENTITY
  • Transformation of the traditional intermediary function
  • 'Expulsion' and 'restructuring'
  • Luftmenshn
  • Transformation of the occupational structure and new intermediary activities
  • Competition to oust rivals from the market and anti-Semitism
  • Haskala: the Jewish enlightenment
  • Assimilation and acculturation
  • 'Necktied' and 'kaftaned' Jews
  • By way of an example: Jews in Warsaw and ¿odz
  • Jewish family
  • Men and women in Jewish society
  • Jewish upbringing
  • Everyday religious customs
  • Synagogue and community organizations
  • Increasing conflicts with the non-Jewish world
  • Socialism, Zionism, new Jewish identity
  • Immigration as an attempt to find a new homeland
  • Center of East European Jewry: Galicia and Bukovina
  • Positive model with contradictions: Hungary
  • Different attitudes to the emancipation of the Jews in Romania, Serbia, and Bulgaria
  • 'Ritual murder': the case of Bohemia and Moravia
  • PART IV. ATTEMPTED ANNIHILATION AND NEW HOPE
  • Jews in the Russian Revolution and in the Soviet Union
  • East European Jewish nationality and new waves of anti-Semitism: the Jews in Poland between the two world wars
  • Precarious situation in individual East European countries
  • Attempted extermination of the Jews
  • Jews in postwar Poland: new suffering and new hope
  • AFTERWORD: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF MEMORY.