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Deutsch-jüdische Identität und Überlebenskampf in Berlin (review)

Deutsch-jüdische Identität und Überlebenskampf in Berlin (review) essary corrective to the notion of them as a mere historical oddity at the end of a lost war, showing instead that they were irreparably tied to earlier policies of mass murder. He has also provided a vital contribution to an understanding of the dynamics at work at the end of wars, as well as the ways average citizens can become complicit in murder. Stephen G. Fritz East Tennessee State University Deutsch-jüdische Identität und Überlebenskampf in Berlin, by Jascha Nemtsov. Jüdische Komponisten im Berlin der NS-Zeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2010. 351 pp. 38.00. Jewish composers in Berlin during the Nazi era are the subject of the new book written by the pianist and musicologist Jascha Nemtsov, who as an interpreter is particularly interested in enriching the concert repertoire through works of unjustly forgotten composers. The title he has chosen indicates his historical perspective: "German-Jewish identity and the struggle for survival in Berlin." Nemtsov outlines the life and works of five musicians as case studies: he picks out Arno Nadel, Oskar Guttmann (along with his son Alfred Goodman), Jakob Schoenberg (who was not acquainted with his famous relative Arnold Schoenberg), Erwin Selig-Bass (named Warner S. Bass after his emigration http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies Purdue University Press

Deutsch-jüdische Identität und Überlebenskampf in Berlin (review)

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Publisher
Purdue University Press
Copyright
Copyright © Purdue University.
ISSN
1534-5165
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

essary corrective to the notion of them as a mere historical oddity at the end of a lost war, showing instead that they were irreparably tied to earlier policies of mass murder. He has also provided a vital contribution to an understanding of the dynamics at work at the end of wars, as well as the ways average citizens can become complicit in murder. Stephen G. Fritz East Tennessee State University Deutsch-jüdische Identität und Überlebenskampf in Berlin, by Jascha Nemtsov. Jüdische Komponisten im Berlin der NS-Zeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2010. 351 pp. 38.00. Jewish composers in Berlin during the Nazi era are the subject of the new book written by the pianist and musicologist Jascha Nemtsov, who as an interpreter is particularly interested in enriching the concert repertoire through works of unjustly forgotten composers. The title he has chosen indicates his historical perspective: "German-Jewish identity and the struggle for survival in Berlin." Nemtsov outlines the life and works of five musicians as case studies: he picks out Arno Nadel, Oskar Guttmann (along with his son Alfred Goodman), Jakob Schoenberg (who was not acquainted with his famous relative Arnold Schoenberg), Erwin Selig-Bass (named Warner S. Bass after his emigration

Journal

Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish StudiesPurdue University Press

Published: Sep 13, 2012

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