Conference Report: Citizenship, Equality and Civil Society - The 200th Anniversary of the Prussian Emancipation Edict for the Jews 1812 (original) (raw)

Jews as German Citizens. The Prussian Emancipation Edict of 1812 and Beyond

Gideon Reuveni

The Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook, 2014

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J. Berkovitz, Review of Michael Brenner, Vicki Caron and Uri R. Kaufmann, eds. .Jewish Emancipation Reconsidered

Jay R Berkovitz

H-France Review, 2006

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Paul Mendes-Flohr, “The Emancipation of European Jewry: Why was it not Self-Evident?” Studia Rosenthaliana, vol. 30, no. 1 (June 1996): 7-20

Paul Mendes-Flohr ז״ל

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The Emancipation ‘Pantheon of Heroes’ in the German-Jewish Public Memory in the 1930s”, German History Volume 21 (2003), number 4, pp. 476-504

Guy Miron

German History, 2003

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The Idea of a Jewish Nation in the German Discourse about Emancipation

doron avraham

Nation and Nationalism, 2016

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Michael A. Meyer, “Great Debate on Antisemitism: Jewish Reaction to New Hostility in Germany 1879-1881,” Leo Baeck Institute Year Book, no. 11 (1966): 137-170

Michael A. Meyer

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The Emancipation 'Pantheon of Heroes' in the German-Jewish Public Memory in the 1930s

גיא מירון

German History, 2003

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A Success Story?: Prussia’s Jewish Educational Policy in the Aftermath of the Emancipation Edict (1812-1870)

Andreas Braemer

Jewish Quarterly Review, 2016

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[report] International Conference 'Central European Jewish Communities in the Toleration and Emancipation Period, 1781-1938'

Alicja Maslak-Maciejewska

Judaica Bohemiae LIX, 2024

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Michael A. Meyer, “Jewish Scholarship and Jewish Identity: Their Historical Relationship in Modern Germany,” Studies in Contemporary Jewry, no. 8 (1992): 181-193

Michael A. Meyer

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Michael Brenner, “Introduction,” in Michael Brenner, ed., A History of Jews in Germany since 1945: Politics, Culture, and Society (Bloomington: Indiana University Press 2018), 1-6

Michael Brenner

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Paul Mendes-Flohr, “Review of ‘German Jews Beyond Judaism’, by George L. Mosse,” in Peter Y. Medding, ed., Israel – State and Society, 1948-1988 [=Studies in Contemporary Jewry, vol. 5 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1989), 376-379

Paul Mendes-Flohr ז״ל

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Michael A. Meyer, “Jews as Jews versus Jews as Germans: Two Historical Perspectives,” Leo Baeck Institute Year Book, no. 36 (1991): xv-xxii

Michael A. Meyer

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Jews and the Ambivalences of Civil Society in Germany, 1800–1933: Assessment and Reassessment

Till van Rahden

Journal of Modern History, 2005

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Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas and Responses. Edited by Francis R. Nicosia and David Scrase. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. 2010. Pp. xv + 245. Cloth $60.00. ISBN 978-1-84545-676-4

Thomas Pegelow Kaplan

Central European History, 2012

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DavidSorkin: Jewish Emancipation: A History Across Five Centuries. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019; pp. x + 511

Julie Kalman

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Michael A. Meyer, “Foreword,” in Christhard Hoffmann, ed., Preserving the Legacy of German Jewry: A History of the Leo Baeck Institute 1955-2005 (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2005), v-ix

Michael A. Meyer

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The "Racialization" of Jewish Self-Identity: The Response to Exclusion in Nazi Germany, 1933-1938

doron avraham

Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 2013

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Michael Brenner, “Jewish Studies in Germany Today: Reflections from the Fulbright German Studies Seminar 1996,” Shofar, vol. 15, no. 4 (Summer 1997): 7-15

Michael Brenner

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Michael A. Meyer, *The Origins of the Modern Jew: Jewish Identity and European Culture in Germany, 1749-1824* (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1967)

Michael A. Meyer

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Michael A. Meyer, “Review of ‘History of the Jewish People in Modern Times’,” AJS Newsletter, no. 28 (March 1981): 15-16

Michael A. Meyer

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Salo W. Baron, “The Journal and the Conference of Jewish Social Studies,” in Abraham G. Duker and Meir Ben-Horin, eds., Emancipation and Counter-Emancipation: Selected Essays from Jewish Social Studies (New York: Ktav Publishing House, 1974), 1-11

Salo Wittmayer Baron ז״ל

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Becoming public : Jews in Baden and Hannover and their role in the German press, 1815-1848

David Meola

2012

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Peter Schäfer, “Jewish Studies in Germany Today,” Jewish Studies Quarterly, vol. 3, no. 2 (1996): 146-161

Peter Schäfer

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Michael A. Meyer, “Religious Reform and Political Revolution in Mid-Nineteenth Century Germany: The Case of Abraham Jakob Adler,” in German-Jewish Thought Between Religion and Politics: Festschrift in Honor of Paul Mendes-Flohr on the Occasion of His 70th Birthday (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2012), 59-81

Michael A. Meyer

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*Two Nations: British and German Jews in Comparative Perspective*, eds. Michael Brenner, Rainer Liedtke, and David Rechter (Tübingen: Mohr-Siebeck, 1999)

Michael Brenner

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A People Apart: The Jews in Europe, 1789-1939 (review)

Benjamin Nathans

Jewish Quarterly Review, 2006

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Jews in Germany after the Holocaust: Memory, Identity, and Jewish German Relations, by Lynn Rapaport

Brian Horowitz

Shofar, 1999

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“History in the House of the Hangman: How Postwar Germany Became a Key Site for the Study of Jewish History,” Steven E. Aschheim and Vivian Liska eds., The German-Jewish Experience Revisited (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015), pp. 171-192

Till van Rahden

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Michael A. Meyer, “The German-Jewish Legacy in America,” Paul Lecture delivered for Indiana University in Indianapolis (14 October 2010)

Michael A. Meyer

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David Ellenson, “Emancipation and the Directions of Modern Judaism: The Lessons of Melitz Yosher,” Studia Rosenthaliana, vol. 30, no. 1 (1996): 118-136

David Ellenson ז״ל

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Michael Brenner, “In the Shadow of the Holocaust: The Changing Image of German Jewry after 1945 (Washington: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, 2010), 1-22

Michael Brenner

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Michael Brenner, “A New German Jewry,” in Michael Brenner, ed., A History of Jews in Germany since 1945: Politics, Culture, and Society (Bloomington: Indiana University Press 2018), 417-431

Michael Brenner

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Michael A. Meyer, “German Jews: The History and the Heritage, Celebrating 60 Years of the Leo Baeck Institute,” in The Leo Baeck Memorial Lecture, no. 58 (New York: Leo Baeck Institute, 2016), 1-15

Michael A. Meyer

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Michael A. Meyer, “(German-) Jewish History from Within: Concluding Remarks,” Aschkenas, no. 18-19 (2008-2009): 147-150

Michael A. Meyer

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