Inciting Laughter: The Development of "Jewish Humor" in 19th Century German CultureWalter de Gruyter, 2000 - 330 Seiten Annotation Takes a cross-disciplinary approach to an examination of , a type of distinctively Jewish humor, written in German but deemed antithetical to the values of Mainstream German-language society of the 19th century. Focusing on the period from 1820 to 1850, Chase emphasizes a dual analysis of , both as stereotype and strategy, stressing throughout the importance of nonessentialism in the discussion of Jewish humor and 19th century German reactions to it. He discusses the humor itself and its role in identity issues, followed by detailed coverage of three Jewish humorists: Moritz Gottlieb Saphir, Ludwig B:orne, and Heinrich Heine. He then assesses the role of in literary history, discusses the "core myth" of German literary history, and evaluates the adaptation of the myth over time. A conclusion is followed by translations of the three humorists' writings. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com). |
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Seite 89
... Wurm . After sneering that the type of Verkehr in the play was none other than Wurm's own , Börne proceeded to develop a parallel between the actor's sexual orientation and the audience's desire to see such a play . As Heine also did ...
... Wurm . After sneering that the type of Verkehr in the play was none other than Wurm's own , Börne proceeded to develop a parallel between the actor's sexual orientation and the audience's desire to see such a play . As Heine also did ...
Seite 90
... Wurm's homosexuality with the antisemitic desire to hear Jews speaking in dialect cut in probably unforeseen directions . The thorny issues raised for today's sensibilities by Börne's The Company We Keep review underscore the ...
... Wurm's homosexuality with the antisemitic desire to hear Jews speaking in dialect cut in probably unforeseen directions . The thorny issues raised for today's sensibilities by Börne's The Company We Keep review underscore the ...
Seite 109
... Wurm and Meyer's perspectives were thus quasi - oppositional , even though the dicta- tes of patriotism kept them from publicly criticizing the government . For men like Meyer and Wurm , culture was no longer based on conti- nuity with ...
... Wurm and Meyer's perspectives were thus quasi - oppositional , even though the dicta- tes of patriotism kept them from publicly criticizing the government . For men like Meyer and Wurm , culture was no longer based on conti- nuity with ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Inciting Laughter: The Development of "Jewish Humor" in 19th Century German ... Jefferson S. Chase Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2000 |
Inciting Laughter: The Development of "Jewish Humor" in 19th Century German ... Jefferson S. Chase Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2013 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adversaries Alexis allowed antisemitic appeared arguments attack audience become Berlin Börne called career chapter character claim common connection Cotta Count course criticism cultural deutsche deutschen difference direct discourse discussion early enemies example fact figures foreign Frankfurt German ghetto Goethe hand Heine Heine's Herr humor idea identity important individual interest issue Italy Jewish Jews Judenwitz later laughter Letters liberal literary literature mainstream major means Menzel nationalist native nature negative never nicht once opinion pamphlet Paris perhaps period Platen play poet polemic political popular positive public sphere published readers reason remained remarks represented response rhetorical role Sämtliche Schriften Saphir satiric sense side similar social society speak stereotype thing throughout tion traditional true turn various Witz write young