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What can Jewish history tell us about German history? How can we understand the history of modern Germany from a Jewish perspective? And how do we bring the voices of German Jews to the fore? Germany through Jewish Eyes explores the dramatic course of German history, from the Enlightenment, through wars and revolutions, unification and reunification, Nazi dictatorship, Holocaust, and the rebuilding of a prosperous, modern democracy - all from a Jewish perspective. Through a series of chronologically ordered life-stories, Shulamit Volkov examines how the lived experience of German Jewry can provide new insights into familiar events and long-term developments. Her study explores the plurality of the Jewish gaze, considering how German Jews sought full equality and integration while attempting to preserve a unique identity, and how they experienced security and integration as well as pronounced hatred. Volkov's innovative study offers readers the opportunity to look again at the pivotal moments of German history with a fresh understanding.
Gupta’s conviction indicates that Indian nationhood had earlier beginnings than has generally been supposed. The “Mutiny-Rebellion” of 1857, long regarded as a key transformative event, being hailed as the “first war of Indian independence” having “national” elements, was situated within a longer genealogy. This underscored the evolutionary process through which Indian nationhood developed. It also highlighted the multivalence of the revolt. It at once symbolized “power,” Indian agency, and collective identity: cutting across caste, class, and communal divisions. By connecting the revolt with the imperial glory of Mughal Delhi, Gupta mediated the many meanings of 1857, and linked it with a long patriotic past that evoked the idea of India despite endless fragmentation. His remarks hold the key to understanding how the many stories of Indian nationhood converged at complex levels.
As is well known, London became an important literary headquarters for a number of now major literary figures who migrated to Britain after World War II from the Caribbean; many of these were to become formative in the evolution of a black British canon. Whilst the presence of these artists in the metropolis of London has commonly been linked to a literary renaissance which began to transform the parameters of the ‘English’ novel, less attention has been paid to how the bi-focal vision of writers such as Edgar Mittelholzer, Wilson Harris, V. S. Naipaul, Sam Selvon, and George Lamming not only articulated a wider-angled vision of modernity but posited alternative metropolitan imaginaries and aesthetics. Focusing primarily on fiction, this essay demonstrates how the respective and distinct experimentations of these writers with form and voice began to reshape the cultural and literary map of the nation, at the same time interrogating its narrow (and often parochial) borders.
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