Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
The German-Jewish Experience: Philosophy, Literature, Religion in the early Twentieth Century
Term
2025C
Subject area
COML
Section number only
401
Section ID
COML1220401
Course number integer
1220
Meeting times
MW 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Liliane Weissberg
Description
Yuri Slezkine described the twentieth century as a "Jewish Age"-to be modern would essentially mean to be a Jew. In German historical and cultural studies, this linkage has long been made--only in reference to the last years of the German monarchy and the time of the Weimar Republic. Indeed, what has become known as "modern" German culture-reflected in literature, music, and the visual arts and in a multitude of public media-has been more often than not assigned to Jewish authorship or Jewish subjects. But what do authorship and subject mean in this case? Do we locate the German-Jewish experience as the driving force of this new "modernity," or is our understanding of this experience the result of this new "modern" world?
Course number only
1220
Cross listings
GRMN1220401, JWST1220401, PHIL1582401
Use local description
No