Book contents
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- 1 Enlightenment without Toleration
- 2 Benevolent Autocracy
- 3 The Half-Open Society
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
1 - Enlightenment without Toleration
from Part I - Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2024
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Germany through Jewish Eyes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: A Jewish Gaze – Plural and Unique
- Part I Learning to Know Germany: 1780–1840
- 1 Enlightenment without Toleration
- 2 Benevolent Autocracy
- 3 The Half-Open Society
- Part II Liberty, Unity, Equality: 1840–1870
- Part III Living in Germany: 1870–1930
- Part IV A Lost Homeland: 1930–2000
- Epilogue: Berlin is not Weimar
- Index
Summary
The chapter begins with an effort to explain the book’s starting-point in the Enlightenment. Moving from historiography to the events of the time, it begins by telling the tale of the essay competition on the question “What is Enlightenment?,” in which Moses Mendelssohn came first, followed by Immanuel Kant. Mentioning that some 200 years later, the French post-modernist historian-philosopher Michel Foucault wrote yet another essay under the same title, in which he explicitly combined German and Jewish history, the chapter moves once again from historiography to history, concentrating on the biography of Moses Mendelssohn, especially on his repeated confrontation with the religious intolerance of some of his enlightened colleagues and then, stressing the ambivalence of the situation, typical of the German Enlightenment as a whole, the chapter ends with a comment on Lessing’s Nathan der Weise.
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- Germany through Jewish EyesA History from the Eighteenth Century to the Present, pp. 13 - 27Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024