Results 1 to 10 of about 205,647 (360)

Jewish Traces in the Inter-War Prose Writing of Assimilated Authors [PDF]

open access: yesSlovo a Smysl, 2022
The study deals with the thematisation of Jewishness in the inter-war prose writing of four authors from assimilated Jewish families: Richard Weiner (born 1884), František Langer (born 1888), Karel Poláček (born 1892) and Egon Hostovský (born 1908 ...
Erik Gilk
doaj   +1 more source

První absolventky – lékařky židovského původu z pražských univerzit a jejich kariérní možnosti mezi světovými válkami

open access: yesActa Universitatis Carolinae Historia Universitatis Carolinae Pragensis, 2021
Given the extent and state of surviving source materials, it is rather difficult to satisfactorily document the involvement of women of Jewish origin in academic education and their subsequent careers in science and practice relevant to the qualification
Ivana Ebelová, Milada Sekyrková
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Yahudilikte İtikâdî Bir Sapkınlık Örneği Olarak Apikoros/Apikoros as a Kind of Heresy in Judaism

open access: yesOksident, 2021
People considered heretical in faith were named by various terms in Jewish literature. Jewish scholars, especially Maimonides (d. 1204), categorized heretics according to the kind of heresy.
Rumeysa Bektaş
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Intertextuality and Its Different Facets in the Narrative Analysis of the Book of Esther and 3 Maccabees

open access: yesCollectanea Theologica, 2023
While the interpretation of the book of Esther has posed many challenges in the past, a key and well-recognized aspect of this text is that it presents a narrative behind one of the most important Jewish holidays, namely, Purim. As such, it also strongly
Mariola Trojanowska
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‘Forgotten Queen’. Was the Jewish women Šīšīnduxt the mother of the Iranian šāhānšāh Wahrām V Gōr [PDF]

open access: yesStudia Antiquitatis et Medii Aevi Incohantis, 2019
The origin of the mother of the Iranian šāhānšāh Wahrām V (420-438), son and successor of Yazdgird I (399-420), is, in scholar literature, treated marginally.
Katarzyna Maksymiuk
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Une identité en éclats : écrire sa vie de Juif errant. Les écrivains juifs contemporains de langue française après 1945

open access: yesDiasporas: Circulations, Migrations, Histoire, 2013
This study draws from an analysis of a literary corpus of 300 works published by around 60 contemporary Jewish writers in the French language between 1945 and the 1980s, and is preoccupied with the modalities of writing about exile and the state of being
Clara Lévy
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'Confounding closed systems': transforming the boundaries of jewish identity in Rebecca Goldstein's novel mazel [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
In contemporary Jewish American fiction, the themes of immigration and resettlement take on a renewed significance. In various short stories and novels, a threefold composition – (prewar) life in Europe, the transatlantic journey and settlement in ...
Buelens, Gert, Lievens, Bart
core   +2 more sources

Modernity and the Jewish Stigma. Julian Tuwim, Alfred Döblin and Kurt Tucholsky: Biographies and Work [PDF]

open access: yes, 2016
The paper deals with biographical, ideological and artistic links between Julian Tuwim, Alfred Döblin and Kurt Tucholsky. On the one hand, the basis of comparison are biographical similarities, the Jewish origin of those three writers, their family ...
Bednarczuk, Monika
core   +2 more sources

Ethno-cultural Borderline: Conceptual, Typological, and Circumstantial Aspects (Alien — Other — One’s own). Third article [PDF]

open access: yesStudia Litterarum, 2021
The final part of the triptych is devoted to the problematics of Ukrainian-Jewish literary border. Unlike two previous parts, where geoplitical and regional aspects prevailed (Galitchina, Kharkov — Donbass), here the “internal” border is focused on, or ...
Yuri Ya. Barabash
doaj   +1 more source

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