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The Other Jewish Question - Identifying the Jew and Making Sense of Modernity (Paperback)
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The Other Jewish Question - Identifying the Jew and Making Sense of Modernity (Paperback)
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This book examines how modernizing German-speaking cultures,
undergoing their own processes of identification, responded to the
narcissistic threat posed by the continued persistence of Judentum
(Judaism, Jewry, Jewishness) by representing "the Jew"'s body-or
rather parts of that body and the techniques performed upon them.
Such fetish-producing practices reveal the question of
German-identified modernity to be inseparable from the Jewish
Question. But Jewish-identified individuals, immersed in the
phantasmagoria of such figurations-in the gutter and garret salon,
medical treatise and dirty joke, tabloid caricature and literary
depiction, church facade and bric-a-brac souvenir-had their own
question, another Jewish Question. They also had other answers, for
these physiognomic fragments not only identified "the Jew" but also
became for some Jewish-identified individuals the building blocks
for working through their particular situations and relaying their
diverse responses. The Other Jewish Question maps the dissemination
of and interrelationships among these corporeal signifiers in
Germanophone cultures between the Enlightenment and the Shoah. Its
analyses of ascribed Jewish physiognomy include tracing the
gendered trajectory of the reception of Benedict Spinoza's
correlation of Jewish persistence, anti-Semitism, and circumcision;
the role of Zopf ("braid") in mediating German Gentile-Jewish
relations; the skin(ny) on the association of Jews and syphilis in
Arthur Dinter's antisemitic bestseller Sin against the Blood and
Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf; as well as the role of Jewish
corporeality in the works of such Jewish-identified authors as
Rahel Levin Varnhagen, Heinrich Heine, Karl Marx, Max Nordau, Franz
Kafka, and Walter Benjamin, as well as such "Jew"-identifying
writers as Ludwig Feuerbach and Daniel Paul Schreber. The Other
Jewish Question portrays how Jewish-identified individuals moved
beyond introjection and disavowal to appropriate and transform this
epidemic of signification to make sense of their worlds and our
modernity.
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