LEADER 04952cam a2200457 i 4500001 284565 005 20240624132602.0 008 220608t20222022gw a b 001 0 eng 010 2021944275 020 3110695332 020 9783110695335 020 |z9783110695403 |q(PDF) 020 9783110695533 |q(EPUB) 035 (DLC) 2021944275 035 (DLC)284565 042 pcc 040 DLC |beng |erda |cDLC 050 00 DS172.2 |b.A7615 2022 245 00 Armenian and Jewish experience between expulsion and destruction / |cedited by Sarah M. Ross and Regina Randhofer. 264 1 Berlin ;Boston : |bDe Gruyter Oldenbourg, |c[2022] 264 4 |c©2022 300 vii, 310 pages : |billustrations ; |c24 cm. 336 text |2rdacontent 336 still image |2rdacontent 337 unmediated |2rdamedia 338 volume |2rdacarrier 490 1 Europäisch-Jüdische Studien - Beiträge = European-Jewish Studies - Contributions ; |vvolume 51 504 Includes bibliographical references and indexes. 505 00 |tFrontmatter -- |tTable of Contents -- |tBroadening Perspectives. Introduction -- |tDIASPORA AND MINORITY ISSUES -- |tIdentity and Migration -- |tIs Translation Diasporic? A Confrontation between Franz Rosenzweig and Yehuda Halevi -- |tSaint Vardan's Day in the Diaspora and the Republic of Armenia: Similarities and Differences. The Use of Art, Literature, and Language in Celebrations -- |tYiddish Songs as an Identificatory Idiom in the Diaspora: Die schönsten Lieder der Ostjuden, Arranged by Darius Milhaud, Stefan Wolpe, and Alvin Curran -- |t"If you see me walking alone on the road": Sephardic Songs of Exile, Expulsion, Memory - and Return -- |tExperience of Alterity -- |tJewish and Armenian Students at German Universities from the End of the Nineteenth Century and until the Outbreak of World War I -- |t"The Jews of Caucasus": Perception of Armenians in the German and Polish Travel Literature -- |t"Natural Born Actors" on the Screen: Das alte Gesetz (1923) and the Theatricality of the Modern Jewish Experience -- |tAGHET AND SHOAH -- |tExperience - Memory - Self-understanding -- |tBetween Armenian Praise and Zionist Critique: Henry Morgenthau and the Jews of the Ottoman Empire -- |tArmenian Genocide and the Jewish Holocaust: Trauma and Its Influence on Identity Changes of Survivors and their Descendants -- |tMemory in Motion: Armenian Youth and New Forms of Engagement with the Past -- |tCultural Representations: Identity Constructions and Negotiation Processes -- |tCollective Memory in Israeli Popular Music: (Re)constructions across Generations -- |tHistorical Awareness in Zavèn Bibérian's Autobiographical Longer Fragment: A Rare Perception of both Armenian and Jewish Sufferings -- |t"Global Solidarity is Something to Warm the Cockles of Your Heart": Holocaust and Genocide in Ephraim Kishon's "Israeli Satire" -- |tPersistent Parallels, Resistant Particularities: Holocaust Analogies and Avoidance in Armenian Genocide Centennial Cinema -- |tContributors -- |tAuthors -- |tEditors -- |tIndex of Subjects -- |tIndex of Names 520 The series European-Jewish Studies reflects the international network and competence of the Moses Mendelssohn Center for European Jewish studies (MMZ). Particular emphasis is placed on the way in which history, the humanities and cultural sciences approach the subject, as well as on fundamental intellectual, political and religious questions that inspire Jewish life and thinking today, and have influenced it in the past. 520 Jews and Armenians are often perceived as peoples with similar tragic historical experiences. Not only were both groups forced into statelessness and a life outside their homelands for centuries, in the 20th century, in the shadow of war, they were threatened with collective annihilation. Thus far, academic approaches to these two "classical" diasporas have been quite different. Moreover, Armenian and Jewish questions posed during the 19th and 20th centuries have usually been treated separately. The conference "We Will Live After Babylon" that took place in Hanover in February 2019, addressed this gap in research and was one of the first initiatives to deal directly with Jewish and Armenian historical experiences, between expulsion, exile and annihilation, in a comparative framework. The contributions in this volume take on multidisciplinary approaches relating to the conference's central themes: diaspora, minority issues and genocide. 591 Record updated by Marcive brief record update service 24 June 2024 599 Shelved at 49-3-7 650 0 Armenian diaspora. 650 0 Armenians |xHistory. 650 0 Jews |xHistory. 650 0 Jewish diaspora. 700 1 Ross, Sarah M., |eeditor. 700 1 Randhofer, Regina, |d1958- |eeditor. 830 0 Europäisch-jüdische Studien. |pBeiträge ; |vv.51. 852 0 |breceiving |kShelved at 49-3-7