Academic literature on the topic 'Jewish (1935-1942)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Jewish (1935-1942)"

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Ben-Amos, Batsheva. "The Dialogical Dimension in the Diary of Chaim Kaplan: 1935–1942." European Journal of Jewish Studies 13, no. 2 (2019): 227–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1872471x-11321065.

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Abstract Chaim Kaplan (1880–1942), principal and owner of a private elementary Hebrew school in Warsaw, wrote a personal diary from 1933 to 1942. So far, only the WWII years have drawn scholarly attention. However, the interpretation of the diary also requires reading his available unpublished entries. An internal dialogical structure dominates his diary where he engages “the other” that interacts with his own inner voice. His pre-war identity is constructed of different and contradicting facets of Zionist ideology, traditional Jewish value system and way of life, and Polish citizenship. When
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Prijac, Lukian. "Déborah Lifszyc (1907–1942): Ethnologue et linguiste (de Gondär à Auschwitz)." Aethiopica 11 (April 26, 2012): 148–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.15460/aethiopica.11.1.153.

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Déborah Lifszyc, a Polish Jewish born in Russia, French naturalized in 1937, was ethnologist and linguist, an one of those least known figures ignored of the 30’s in Ethiopian Studies. A member of the Dakar–Djibouti mission in 1932, she follows Marcel Griaule in a 1935 mission in Sudan. Michel Leiris’s friend, she worked with him on the zars and the interpretation of amulets. A founding member of the Musée de l’Homme in Trocadéro, she joins the French resistance in the network of the same name. Arrested by the French police in 1942, she was deported to Auschwitz where she died.
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Lebet-Minakowska, Anna. "Szymon Rabinowicz – odnaleziony." Krakowski Rocznik Archiwalny 24 (2018): 79–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/12332135kra.18.002.14389.

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Szymon Rabinowicz – rediscovered In 1935, the National Museum in Krakow began collecting Jewish handicraft with the aim of establishing the “Judaica department”. Until WWII (1939), numerous objects were purchased with the help of antique shops and private individuals. One of the main sources (or even the most important) was Szymon Rabinowicz, a Jewish antique dealer. Surprisingly, although his work was very important for the preservation of Jewish culture, very little was known about him – he was virtually anonymous. Even worse: many legends about him that were spread among old curators of the
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Grün, Lili. "To the Theatre!" Scenario: A Journal of Performative Teaching, Learning, Research X, no. 2 (2016): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/scenario.10.2.1.

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The rubric Texts around Theatre features historical and contemporary cross-cultural and culture-specific perspectives on theatre – unexpectedly funky, unusually enthralling, disturbingly fascinating. https://www.aviva-verlag.de/autor-innen-co/lili-gr%C3%BCn/ Young Loni Holl, the protagonist in Lili Grün’s autobiographical novel, desires to become an actress. Only the theatre gives Loni the feeling of escape from her boring day to day life. She pursues her goal with determination, and a theatre engagement in the province seems to be the long-awaited chance for her debut. She straddles rehearsal
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5

Ross, Nadine I. "Bodies and Spaces: Citizenship as Claims-Making in Germany, 1942–1949." Central European History, August 22, 2023, 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s000893892200173x.

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Abstract In 1935, the Nazi Party promulgated the Reich citizenship law, which, to protect the purity of the Volksgemeinschaft, denaturalized numerous people who perceived themselves as German. Despite this perceived threat to the national body, the Third Reich drafted some mixed-race men to serve in the Wehrmacht during World War II. Traditionally, scholars have focused their studies of mixed-race veterans on the so-called Jewish Mischlinge who served in the Wehrmacht. This article expands the aperture by examining the oral history testimony of Hans Hauck, a Black German Wehrmacht veteran whos
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Books on the topic "Jewish (1935-1942)"

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Leo, Lippmann, and Curilla Wolfgang, eds. Leo Lippmann, "--dass ich wie ein guter Deutscher empfinde und handele": Zur Geschichte der Deutsch-Israelitischen Gemeinde in Hamburg in der Zeit vom Herbst 1935 bis zum Ende 1942 : zwei Berichte. Dölling und Galitz, 1993.

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Jokūbas, Skliutauskas, ed. Für Lyda: Tagebuch 1942. Baltos Lankos, 2002.

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Virtzberg, Beni. From Death to Battle: Auschwitz Survivor and Palmach Fighter. Yad Vashem Publications, 2018.

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