Preface by John Grenville and Raphael Gross
I. JEWISH AND ISLAMIC STUDIES
ISMAR SCHORSCH: Converging Cognates: the Intersection of Jewish and Islamic Studies in Nineteenth Century Germany
II. OVERLAPPING SPHERES
ROBERT LIBERLES: Jews and Christians in Early Modern Germany
YAACOV DEUTSCH: Jewish Anti-Christian Invectives and Christian Awareness: An unstudied form of interaction in the Early Modern Period
NATALIE NAIMARK-GOLDBERG: Health, leisure and sociability at the turn of the nineteenth century: Jewish women in German spas
DEBRA KAPLAN: Women and Worth: Female Access to Property in Early Modern Urban Jewish Communities
MARION APTROOT: Writing ‘Jewish’ not ‘German’: Functional Writing Styles and the Symbolic Function of Yiddish in Early Modern Ashkenaz
NOA SOPHIE KOHLER: Schutzjuden and opportunistic criminality in the Early Modern period: the Lemmel family from Neustadt-Eberswalde
III. ON ANTISEMITISM, JEWISH SELF-HATRED AND IDENTITY
HANNAH AHLHEIM: Establishing Antisemitic Stereotypes: Social and Economic Segregation of Jews by means of Political Boycott in Germany
OAUL REITTER: Interwar Expressionism, Zionist Self-Help Writing, and the Other History of ‘Jewish Self-Hatred’
LISA FETHERINGILL ZWICKER: Antisemitism, the Limits of Antisemitic Rhetoric, and a Movement against Russian Students at German Universities, 1908–1914
JULIE LIEBER: Crafting the Future of Judaism: Gender and Religious Education in Vienna 1867–1914
IV. HANS KOHN (1891-1971). THE MULTIFACETED CONTRIBUTIONS OF A POLITICAL PHILOSOPHER
CHRISTIAN WIESE: Introduction: The Legacy of Hans Kohn
ZOHAR MAOR: Hans Kohn and the Dialectics of Colonialism: Insights on Nationalism and Colonialism from Within
ADI GORDON: The Ideological Convert and the “Mythology of Coherence”: The Contradictory Hans Kohn and his Multiple Metamorphoses
NOAM PIANKO: Did Kohn Believe in the “Kohn Dichotomy”? Reconsidering Kohn’s Journey from The Political Idea of Judaism to the Idea of Nationalism
V. MEMOIR
MARTIN ANDERMANN: Life as a young Jewish hospital doctor in Heidelberg and Berlin – 1929-1932: A Memoir
VI. LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
VII. BIBLIOGRAPHY
VIII. INDEX