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Texts and Contexts : The Return of German Jews and the Question of Identity - John Borneman

Texts and Contexts

The Return of German Jews and the Question of Identity

By: John Borneman, Jeffrey M Peck

Hardcover | 1 October 1995

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"A firsthand confrontation with the inner fears and the outer realities of [German Jews] as they themselves reflect post-Shoah history and experience. This is not merely lived 'history, ' it is 'history' with a living face."-Sander L. Gilman. This absorbing book of interviews takes one to the heart of modern German Jewish history. Of the eleven German Jews interviewed, four are from West Berlin, and seven are from East Berlin. The interviews provide an exceptionally varied and intimate portrait of Jewish experience in twentieth-century Germany. There are first-hand accounts of the Weimar Republic, the Nazi era, the Holocaust, and the divided Germany of the Cold War era. There are also vivid descriptions of the new united Germany, with its alarming resurgence of xenophobia and anti-Semitism. Some of the men and women interviewed affirm their dual German and Jewish identities with vigor. There is the West Berliner, for instance, who proclaims, "I am a German Jew. I want to live here." Others describe the impossibility of being both German and Jewish: "I don't have anything in common with the whole German people." Many confess to profound ambivalence, such as the East Berliner who feels that he is neither a native nor a foreigner in Germany: "If someone asks me, 'Who are you?' then I can only say, 'I am a fish out of water.'" Uncertain, angry, resolute, anguished-the diverse testimonies of these people provide startling evidence that "the history of German Jews is not over." John Borneman, an associate professor of anthropology at Cornell University, is author of Belonging in the Two Berlins: Kin, State, Nation and After the Wall: East Meets West in the New Berlin. Jeffrey M. Peck,associate professor of German at Georgetown University, is author of Hermes Disguised: Literary Hermeneutics and the Interpretation of Literature.


John Borneman, an associate professor of anthropology at Cornell University, is author of Belonging in the Two Berlins: Kin, State, Nation and After the Wall: East Meets West in the New Berlin. Jeffrey M. Peck, associate professor of German at Georgetown University, is author of Hermes Disguised: Literary Hermeneutics and the Interpretation of Literature.


Industry Reviews
Eleven marginally Jewish subjects talk about their lives as Jews in East, West, and united Germany. While Germany abounds with younger Jewish immigrants from Israel and the former Soviet Union who could speak about the inherent conflicts of being Jews in post-Holocaust Germany, Borneman (Anthropology/Cornell Univ.; After the Wall, 1991, etc.) and Peck (German/Georgetown Univ.) have chosen interviewees (several in their 80s) who are Jews in name only (one asks, "How could we Germans [perpetrate the Holocaust]?") and are too committed to GDR socialism to convey much conflict about their choice of home country. Moreover, too many of the men and women interviewed here are academics or journalists themselves, including another ethnographer. The authors interrupt the interviews with their often unnecessary analysis to further prevent the reader from interacting with the subjects, and their prose is excruciatingly jargon-laden and pedantic: "It makes a historical constructivist (i.e., antiracial, antiessentialist) argument, maintaining that Jewish identity is syncretic and entails multiple subject positions." The book only sputters to life with scattered revelations about decisions to return to Germany, how the reality of Soviet gulags only emerged after Gorbachev, misconceptions held about the US and Israel, the decrease in banality and increase in danger in a united Berlin, and, on the authors' part, why being gay and single facilitates the writing of exorbitant overseas projects like this one. A potentially intriguing subject, but the authors miss the real story by taking such an oddly unrepresentative group of subjects. (Kirkus Reviews)

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