""We Will Never Yield""

INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780253065223

Jews, the German Press, and the Fight for Inclusion in the 1840s

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By David A. Meola
Imprint:
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:
360 g
Pages:
270

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Description

David A. Meola is the Bert and Fanny Meisler Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies at the University of South Alabama. He has published articles in the journal Antisemitism Studies, and the Leo Baeck Institute Yearbook as well as several book chapters. He also served as editor for A Cultural History of Genocide in the Long Nineteenth Century.

Acknowledgments Note on Translation List of Abbreviations Introduction 1. The Development of Jewish Life and the German Newspaper during the Early Nineteenth Century 2. Jewish Emancipation in the Badenese and German Press 3. Jewish Religious Reform in the German and Badenese Press 4. The Fight for Jewish Admission to Constance in the Bodensee Press, 1846 Conclusion: Fighting for Inclusion in Vormaerz German Society Appendix A: Badenese Rabbinical Ordinance (1824) Appendix B: Published Will and Testament of Salomon Heine Notes Bibliography Index

"David Meola's study breaks new ground in depicting how Jews in Baden used regional and national newspapers to contest Christian definitions of Judaism. By showcasing the confidence with which Jews engaged liberals to reorient viewpoints about Jewish civic identity, Meola underscores the importance of the public sphere as a testing ground for entry into civil society. Scholars of European and Jewish history will benefit from the study's sharp focus on the 1840s, a decade that witnessed intense debates about the extent and limits of Jewish integration into German society."-James M. Brophy, Francis H. Squire Professor, University of Delaware "With his focus on the mainstream Jewish press (as opposed to the German-Jewish press or treatises and pamphlets with a more limited audience) Meola makes several important interventions in the history of the struggle for legal emancipation and the study of Jewish self-representation in and around the 1840s."-Elizabeth Loentz, University of Illinois at Chicago

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