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New essays examining Goethe's relationship to the Jews, and the
contribution of Jewish scholars to the fame of the greatest German
writer. The success of Daniel Goldhagen's Hitler's Willing
Executioners(1997) and the heated debates that followed its
publication exposed once again Germany's long tradition of
anti-Semitism as a major cause of the Holocaust. Goldhagen, like
many before him, drew a direct and irresistible line from Luther's
pamphlets against the Jews to Hitler's attempted annihilation of
European Jewry. This collection of new essays examines the thesis
of a universal anti-Semitism in Germany by focussing on its
greatest author, Goethe, and seeing to what extent some scholars
are justified in accusing him of anti-Semitism. It places the
reception of Goethe's works in a broader historical context: his
relationship to Judaism and the Jews; the reception of his works by
the Jewish elite in Germany, the reception of the 'Goethe cult' by
Jewish scholars; and the Jewish contribution to Goethe scholarship.
The last section of the volume treats the Jewish contribution to
Goethe's fame and to Goethe philology since the 19th century, and
the exodus of many Jewish authors and scholars after 1933, when
they took their beloved Goethe into exile. When a few of them
returned to Germany after 1945, it was to a country that had lost
Goethe's most devoted audience, the German Jews. KLAUS L. BERGHAHN
and JOST HERMAND are professors of German at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
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