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<em>“The volume should interest scholars of the nineteenth- and early-twentieth centuries, while its engaging individual chapters could easily be assigned to undergraduate or graduate students.”</em> <strong>• The English Historical Review</strong></p>
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<em>“For many reasons, [this] is an exciting and groundbreaking book… [Its] three editors are all highly qualified to comment on the present state of affairs in histography regarding the family, the nation, and Jewish and gender history. They write with urgency and clarity… By integrating the comparative histories of Italy and Germany with the transnational, as well as the Jewish and feminist histories of Italy and Germany, the book shows very clearly how both these perspectives are significant and necessary, offering insights into the way individuals and families in both nation states considered how gender and identity formed a major part of their shared experiences.”</em> <strong>• Australian Journal of Jewish Studies</strong></p>
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<em>“The greatest achievement of this edited volume is that it doesn’t aim to define emancipation but to understand both the ‘woman’ and ‘Jewish question’ within the ideology of nationalism. The articles also provide new conceptual frameworks such as compared and integrated history, transnational, and entangled histories (Amerigo Caruso), and a variety of yet unexplored historical sources, such as ego documents. Scholars interested in the intersection of the cultural turn and nationalism studies might find this volume of prime interest as well.”</em> <strong>• KULT_Online</strong></p>
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<em>“With a genuinely transnational perspective, this volume avoids the pitfalls of a simple juxtaposition of parallel stories, German and Italian, entrenched in the narrative tradition of national history. It presents an original standpoint on gender as well as Jewish studies.”</em> <strong>• Asher Salah</strong>, Hebrew University of Jerusalem</p>
Since the end of the nineteenth century, traditional historiography has emphasized the similarities between Italy and Germany as “late nations”, including the parallel roles of “great men” such as Bismarck and Cavour. Rethinking the Age of Emancipation aims at a critical reassessment of the development of these two “late” nations from a new and transnational perspective. Essays by an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars examine the discursive relationships among nationalism, war, and emancipation as well as the ambiguous roles of historical protagonists with competing national, political, and religious loyalties.
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Martin Baumeister, Philipp Lenhard, Ruth Nattermann
Section 1: Concepts and Perspectives
Chapter 1. Nineteenth-Century Italy and Germany beyond National History
Amerigo Caruso
Chapter 2. Rethinking Nation and Family
Ilaria Porciani
Section 2: Family and Nation
Chapter 3. The Morenos between Family and Nation: Notes on the History of a Bourgeois Mediterranean Jewish family (1850–1912)
Marcella Simoni
Chapter 4. Portrait of a “Political Lady”: Family Ties and National Activism around 1848 in the Italian and German States
Giulia Frontoni
Chapter 5. Emancipation, Religious Affiliation, and Family Status around 1900
Angelika Schaser
Section 3: Religion and Education
Chapter 6. The Legacy of Adam and Eve: Morality and Gender in Jewish “Catechisms” in Nineteenth-Century Germany
Philipp Lenhard
Chapter 7. The Transformation of Jewish Education in Nineteenth-Century Italy: The Meaning of “Catechisms”
Silvia Guetta
Chapter 8. Religion and Nation: Catholic and Protestant Female Education and Cultural Models in Germany (1871–1914)
Sylvia Schraut
Chapter 9. Women for the Homeland: Comparing Catholic and Protestant Female Education in Italy (1848–1908)
Liviana Gazzetta
Section 4: Politics of Women’s Emancipation
Chapter 10. Denomination Matters: Strategies of Self-Designation of the German Women’s Movement
Anne-Laure Briatte
Chapter 11. German and Italian Advocates for Women’s Emancipation at the International Congress for Women’s Achievements and Women’s Endeavors in Berlin (1896)
Magdalena Gehring
Section 5: Patriotism and Gender
Chapter 12. Historian Between Two Fatherlands: Robert Davidsohn and World War I
Martin Baumeister
Chapter 13. Between Motherhood and Patriotic Duty: Marital Correspondence as a Key Source for the Understanding of French-Jewish Women’s Perspectives on World War I
Marie-Christin Lux
Section 6: War and Violence
Chapter 14. "An Expression of Horror and Sadness"? (Non)Communication of War Violence Against Civilians in Ego Documents (Austria-Hungary)
Christa Hämmerle
Chapter 15. Hunger, Rape, Escape: The Many Aspects of Violence against Women and Children in the Territories of the Italian Front
Nadia Maria Filippini
Section 7: War Experience and Memory
Chapter 16. The Construction of the Enemy in Two Jewish Writers: Carolina Coen Luzzatto and Enrica Barzilai Gentilli
Tullia Catalan
Chapter 17. Heroic Fathers, Patriotic Mothers, Fallen Sons: National Belonging and Political Positioning in Italian-Jewish Families’ Versions of World War I
Ruth Nattermann
Chapter 18. The Commemoration of Jewish Soldiers in Austria
Gerald Lamprecht
Index
Philipp Lenhard is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Jewish History and Culture at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Martin Baumeister is Director of the German Historical Institute in Rome.