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Pole/Jew: History, Literature, Identity, Future [Kõva köide]

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Teised raamatud teemal:
Pole/Jew brings together a group of scholars-about half of them Jewish, about half of them ethnic Poles-from the United States, Poland, the United Kingdom, and Canada and enlists their diverse methodological and generational perspectives to push debates over Polish-Jewish relations beyond entrenched and reductive positions. At the core of the volume are the following questions:

What impact has the Holocaust had on Polish history and Polish literature? How has the Holocaust affected Polish-Jewish-and Polish-identity? What future is there for relations between Polands small Jewish minority and the countrys overwhelming ethnic Polish majority? Between Poland and Israel? Between Jews of the diaspora and ethnic Poles abroad? Which research areas have yet to be addressed or revisited and reexamined? Are there ways to move beyond the reductive notion of 1989 (i.e., the fall of the communist regime in Poland) as wall and fulcrum?

By addressing these compelling questions, this volume offers fresh perspectives and encourages a nuanced understanding of Polish-Jewish relations.

Contributors:

M. B. B. Biskupski Robert Blobaum John J. Bukowczyk Patrice M. Dabrowski Halina Filipowicz Agnieszka Jeyk Boena Karwowska Kamil Kijek Kate Korycki Elbieta Kossewska Grayna J. Kozaczka Stanisaw Krajewski Adam Lipszyc Wiktor Marzec Alina Molisak Stanisaw Obirek Benjamin Paloff Antony Polonsky Brian Porter-Szcs Piotr Puchalski Roma Sendyka Dariusz Stola Katarzyna Zechenter Joshua D. Zimmerman Geneviève Zubrzycki Sawomir Jacek urek
John J. Bukowczyk is a professor emeritus of history at Wayne State University and the author of numerous articles and books on immigration and ethnic history. He is the series editor for the Polish and Polish-American Studies Series from Ohio University Press and editor of Photographs from Detroit, 19752019.

Halina Filipowicz is a professor emerita in the Department of German, Nordic, and Slavic and the Department of Gender and Women's Studies at the University of WisconsinMadison. Her main areas of research are Polish and Polish-Jewish literature, modern intellectual history, and gender studies. In 2020, she became the first woman to serve as editor in chief of The Polish Review.