<p>"This is, to my knowledge, the most comprehensive, most broadly based, and likely the most useful and accessible book on Jewish photography. Well written, richly illustrated, and intelligently and comprehensively constructed and edited, it is extremely important to the field of Jewish studies but also serves as a model for anyone who wishes to engage with photographic material." — Ellen Smith, Brandeis University</p>

Reveals the significance of photography in modern Jewish history and memory.

Rethinking Jewish History and Memory Through Photography highlights the significant role of photography in modern Jewish history and memory. Considering photographs as unique documents that not only depict reality but also shape how it is perceived and remembered, the volume emphasizes the importance of careful photographic analysis in understanding modern Jewish experiences, self-perceptions, and memories. Bringing together leading and emerging scholars, the book offers a range of innovative approaches to central themes in modern Jewish history, including nationalism, migration, race, and antisemitism. In addition to the discussion of various case studies, a variety of methodological approaches for the current and future use of photoanalysis by scholars are presented.

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Acknowledgments

Introduction
Ofer Ashkenazi and Thomas Pegelow Kaplan

Part I. Reading, Curating, and Teaching "Jewish" Photography: Theory and Practice

1. What Is Jewish Photography and What Can We Learn from It? A Discussion with Marianne Hirsch and Leo Spitzer
Ofer Ashkenazi and Thomas Pegelow Kaplan

2. Invisibly Jewish: Lotte Jacobi, Photography, and the Boundaries of Jewish Cultural Studies
Lisa Silverman

3. Photographs, Jews, and Nazis: The Politics of a Visual Archive, Historically and Today
Maiken Umbach and Jonathan Stafford

Part II. Probing the Boundaries of Documentation: Jewish Photographic Memory

4. Theodor Herzl Is Yael Bartana
Noam Gal

5. Paper Tombstones: Photographic Inventory and German Jewish Cemetery Books
Daniel H. Magilow

6. Displaced and Dreaming in Postwar Germany: The Lure of the Motorcycle and the Briefcase
Dora Apel

7. Reactivating Nineteenth-Century Jewish Portrait Albums in Institutions: Cultural Memory and Connected Histories
Michele Klein

Part III. The Photographed Jewish Body: Agency, Race, Nation

8. Zionism and the "Jewish Pathos Formula" in Helmar Lerski's Type Photographs
Amos Morris-Reich

9. Photography and Racism in Israel: A Telegraphic Sketch of Three Processes
Ktzia Alon

Part IV. Jewish Photography as a Commentary on Crisis and Violence

10. Photography as Agency: Self-assurance through Urban Documentation in the Works of Roman Vishniac and Abraham Pisarek
Joachim Schlor

11. Capturing Blind Spots: The Photographed and the Not-to-Be-Photographed in Nazi Germany
Christoph Kreutzmuller and Theresia Ziehe

12. The Afterlife of the Barefoot Rabbi and the Making of an Iconic Holocaust Photograph
Yechiel Weizman

Part V. The Jewish Gaze on the Other "Others": Migration, Colonialism, Minorities

13. Moving Views: Global Routes of Jewish Refuge as Spaces of Early Humanitarian Seeing
Rebekka Grossmann

14. Politics and Pictures: Jewish American Photographers and Black Americans, 1938–1964
Deborah Dash Moore

15. Beyond Black and White: Jews, African Americans, and Africa in Photography, Film, and Television
Michael Berkowitz

Contributing Authors
Index

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Reveals the significance of photography in modern Jewish history and memory.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9798855803464
Publisert
2025-08-01
Utgiver
State University of New York Press
Vekt
703 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
29 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Biografisk notat

Ofer Ashkenazi is Professor of History and the Director of the Koebner-Minerva Center for German History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Thomas Pegelow Kaplan is Professor of History and the Louis P. Singer Endowed Chair in Jewish History at the University of Colorado Boulder.