Ghetto Writing: Traditional and Eastern Jewry in German-Jewish Literature from Heine to Hilsenrath

Couverture
Anne Fuchs, Florian Krobb
Camden House, 1999 - 231 pages
Fresh articles about a much neglected genre, fiction from and about the Jewish ghetto.

Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries ghetto fiction played an important part in the expression of a particularly German-Jewish quest for identity. The volume Ghetto Writing takes the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the publication of Leopold Kompert's collection of ghetto stories Aus dem Ghetto (1848) to fill a gap and give testimony to an important genre that has been unduly silenced in the literary histories of the post-war period. The volume presents some 15 articles by scholars from Scandinavia, Germany, Great Britain, and Ireland whose contributions offer new analyses of ghetto writing by well known authors such as Heinrich Heine and Joseph Roth, andcompletely new material on forgotten ghetto writers who deserve to be rediscovered, such as Alexander Granach. The articles cover various types of ghetto writing, ranging from ghetto fiction in the tradition of Leopold Kompert and Karl Emil Franzos, to diaries, travelogues, autobiography, and even contemporary German HipHop and Rap lyrics.

 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
Ritchie Robertson
25
Florian Krobb
41
Chris Thornhill
66
Joachim Beug
83
Jörg Thunecke
97
Paul Kerry
111
David Horrocks
126
Michael Kane
140
Ena Pedersen
156
Michael Schmidt
171
Frank Möbus and Martin B Münch
195
Bibliography of Works Cited
211
Index
227
Droits d'auteur

Expressions et termes fréquents

À propos de l'auteur (1999)

Anne Fuchs is professor of modern German literature and culture at University College Dublin.

Informations bibliographiques