Re: [czernowitz-l] Special issue of journal: Czernowitz

From: Bella M. <bekhch_at_gmail.com_at_nowhere.org>
Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2021 14:45:06 -0800
To: Jim Wald <jwald_at_hampshire.edu>
Reply-To: "Bella M." <bekhch_at_gmail.com>


Hi Jim,

How and where may I get the full issue of this magazine? What is Project Muse? Is there URL or hard copy?
Thank you,
Bella

Sent from my iPhone

> On Feb 19, 2021, at 8:19 AM, Jim Wald <jwald_at_hampshire.edu> wrote:
>
> Hi, all.
>
> I am in a webinar now on a new special issue of the Journal of Austrian
> Studies that is devoted to Czernowitz.
>
> ANK: The Journal of Austrian Studies: Webinar: Czernowitz (19.02.2021)
>
>
> The Journal of Austrian Studies presents a JAS Webinar: Czernowitz
>
> Co-sponsored by the Center for Austrian Studies and the Center for
> Jewish Studies
>
> of the University of Minnesota.
>
> I have not yet read the journal, but I am sure it will be of interest to
> list members.
>
> Here is an excerpt from the introduction.
>
> "In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
>
> "From the Editors
> Leslie Morris and Joseph Moser
>
> "Czernowitz, the legendary city of German-speaking Austrian culture in
> Eastern Europe and the birthplace of Paul Celan and Rosa Ausländer as
> well as many other writers and artists, has not received much attention
> in Austrian Studies. Situated on the edge of the contiguous
> German-speaking territories of Europe, Czernowitz was a linguistic
> exclave in which Yiddish-speaking Jews from Galicia settled after the
> Austrians took control of Bukovina in 1775. Famous not only for the
> prominent German-language poets it produced, Czernowitz also played a
> major role in the formation of a modern Yiddish literature, as the site
> of the first international Yiddish Conference in 1908. Within this
> multilingual environment under Austrian rule, where Romanian and
> Ukrainian were the main languages, Galician Jews assimilated from
> Yiddish to German and built an almost utopian German-speaking
> Austrian-Jewish city. By the turn of the twentieth century, Czernowitz
> was a model Austrian city, culturally, linguistically, and
> architecturally. German-speaking Jews, who formed a large minority in
> the city, felt more secure here than anywhere else in the Habsburg
> Empire, yet this utopian sense of harmony was undermined by underlying
> ethnic conflicts and a deeply embedded antisemitism and was interrupted
> by World War I. Notwithstanding, Austrian-Jewish culture had established
> itself so firmly before 1914 that it was able to continue under Romanian
> control, despite oppressive language laws, until the Soviet invasion in
> 1940, which was followed by the invasion of the Romanian Fascists and
> the German Nazis a year later in 1941, which destroyed Jewish life and
> culture in the city.
>
> "Czernowitz has long served as a cipher of sorts for thinking about the
> now-lost spaces of Jewish life in eastern Europe. Certainly, in the
> field of German Studies, the prominence of the city's two best-known
> poets, Celan and Ausländer, have brought some attention to the role
> Czernowitz played in the formation of a multilingual Jewish poetics. And
> yet, despite scholarship [End Page xi] in the field on the foundational
> role Czernowitz played for Celan and Ausländer, not to mention for the
> development of modern Yiddish culture, scant attention has been paid to
> the cultural and historical significance of the city and to the complex
> mechanism of nostalgia and memory in reclaiming this legendary lost
> space that, nonetheless, still exists. This special issue of the Journal
> of Austrian Studies attempts to address this gap in scholarship about
> Czernowitz. The idea for this issue emerged from a three-panel series,
> organized by Leslie Morris and Joseph Moser at the 2017 German Studies
> Association conference in Atlanta, aimed at covering a wide range of
> cultural and literary topics on the former capital of the Austrian
> crownland Bukovina. The goal of this special issue with six articles is
> to present Czernowitz from a variety of angles and to enhance the
> understanding of this complex, fraught, yet celebrated place in Austrian
> and Jewish cultural history.
>
> "Andrei Corbea-Hoisie's article "Die Czernowitzer deutschsprachige
> Presse vor und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg" examines the role of the
> Germanlanguage press in Czernowitz as a tool for colonizing the eastern
> portion of the Habsburg Empire between 1848 and 1914, in the context of
> other Germanlanguage newspapers across Austria-Hungary. Journalism in
> Czernowitz was unique, as the newspapers were not written by an exclave
> German minority but rather by Jewish journalists who had assimilated
> from Yiddish to German, carrying out this effort of colonization on
> behalf of the Habsburg officials. The Jews saw in German a supranational
> language that could stem the nationalist trends of the time and area and
> support the multicultural ethos of the Habsburg Empire that was so
> beneficial to the Jews. This Jewish German-language press in Czernowitz
> was confronted with a reactionary and nationalist antisemitic press in
> Czernowitz. Even after the takeover of Bukovina by Romania in 1918,
> Czernowitz's Jewish bourgeoisie managed to maintain a German-language
> press in the city until the Soviet invasion in 1940, even if the ties to
> Vienna were severed with the end of World War I. Corbea-Hoisie makes the
> important argument that the German language served less to nurture
> Habsburg nostalgia after 1918..."
>
>
> The full issue is available through Project Muse.
>
> Jim
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Received on 2021-02-20 01:57:44

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