Book contents
- Frontmatter
- In search of German culture: an introduction
- 1 The citizen and the state in modern Germany
- 2 German national identity
- 3 Elites and class structure
- 4 Jews in German society
- 5 Non-German minorities, women and the emergence of civil society
- 6 Critiques of culture
- 7 The functions of 'Volkskultur', mass culture and alternative culture
- 8 The development of German prose fiction
- 9 Modern German poetry
- 10 German drama, theatre and dance
- 11 Music in modern German culture
- 12 Modern German art
- 13 Modern German architecture
- 14 German cinema
- 15 The media of mass communication: the press, radio and television
- Index
4 - Jews in German society
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- In search of German culture: an introduction
- 1 The citizen and the state in modern Germany
- 2 German national identity
- 3 Elites and class structure
- 4 Jews in German society
- 5 Non-German minorities, women and the emergence of civil society
- 6 Critiques of culture
- 7 The functions of 'Volkskultur', mass culture and alternative culture
- 8 The development of German prose fiction
- 9 Modern German poetry
- 10 German drama, theatre and dance
- 11 Music in modern German culture
- 12 Modern German art
- 13 Modern German architecture
- 14 German cinema
- 15 The media of mass communication: the press, radio and television
- Index
Summary
The 'German Question', however one phrases it, always involves, at least by implication, German Jewry. In its classical formulation - on national development and territorial unity - the query raises issues of citizenship, political participation and social change with immediate bearing on the Jewish communities in Germany. More recently, the German Question asks how the country could have embarked on the terrible course that led to the Third Reich, the Second World War and the Holocaust, which very nearly realised its goal of eliminating the Jewish presence in German society. In short, the story of German-Jewish relations reflects at once the hope and the horror of German history.
Jews and Germans have lived together for nearly 2000 years, and different but related tensions characterise this association - variously described as a symbiosis, a dialogue, a long quarrel and an alliance based on deception - before and after Auschwitz. The Holocaust marks a singular historical moment that has everything to do with German-Jewish relations today. But one damages the past by conflating all of German-Jewish experience with the Holocaust, or by reading events of the last centuries as simply a prelude to National Socialist atrocities. For an adequate understanding of the meaning and direction of the German-Jewish history, one must consider the longer record of Jews in Germany.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Modern German Culture , pp. 86 - 109Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999