Jewish Culture and
History
Contents of Volume
7
Issue 7.3
- Harvey E. Goldberg, The Oriental and the
Orientalist: The Meeting of Mordecai Ha-Cohen and Nahum Slouschz
- Alan Rosen, ‘Strong
Enough to Carry Experience’:The
Holocaust, Multilingualism and the Problem of English
- Oren Soffer, Zionist
Discourse and the Rabbinic Genre
- Marvin J. Heller, He
should be called Sama’el:
Michael Levi Rodkinson – The Life and Literary Career of a Jewish
Scoundrel Revisited
- Guy Miron, Document:
Conversations on the Jewish Question in Hungary, 1925–26
For abstracts of
these articles, please look here.
Issue 7.1 & 2
Special Issue: David Cesarani and Gemma Romain (eds.),
Jews and Port Cities, 1590–1990: Commerce, Community and Cosmopolitanism
Part I: The Sephardi Diaspora
- Introduction by David Cesarani
- Lois C. Dubin, ‘Wings on their feet … and
wings on their head’: Reflections on the Study of Port Jews
- Francesca Trivellato, The Port Jews of
Livorno and their Global Networks of Trade in the Early Modern Period
- Thorsten Wagner, Port Jews in Copenhagen:
The Sephardi Experience and its Influence on the Development of a Modern
Jewish Community in Denmark
- Evelyne Oliel-Grausz, Networks and Communication
in the Sephardi Diaspora: An Added Dimension to the Concept of Port Jews
and Port Jewries
- Klaus Weber, Were Merchants More Tolerant? ‘Godless
Patrons of the Jews’ and the Decline of the Sephardi Community in
Late Seventeenth-Century Hamburg
- Adam Sutcliffe, Identity, Space and Intercultural
Contact in the Urban Entrepôt: The Sephardic Bounding of Community
in Early Modern Amsterdam and London
- Linda M. Rupert, Trading Globally, Speaking
Locally: Curaçao’s Sephardim in the Making of a Caribbean
Creole
Part II: Cosmopolitanism and Its Limits
- Gemma Romain, Ethnicity, Identity and ‘Race’:
The Port Jews of Nineteenth-Century Charleston
- David Cesarani, The Jews of Bristol and
Liverpool, 1750–1850: Port Jewish Communities in the Shadow of Slavery
- Carlotta Ferrara Degli Uberti, The ‘Jewish
Nation’ of Livorno: A Port Jewry on the Road to Emancipation
- Sakis Gekas,
The Port Jews of Corfu and the ‘Blood Libel’ of 1891: A Tale
of Many Centuries and of One Event
- Nicholas J. Evans, The Port Jews of Libau,
1880–1914
- William Kenefick, Jewish and Catholic Irish
Relations: The Glasgow Waterfront c.1880–1914
- Milton Shain,
Richard Mendelsohn and Vivian Bickford-Smith, Testing Cosmopolitan Tolerance:
Port Jews in Cape Town During the Late Victorian and Edwardian Years
- Tony Kushner, From Atlantic Hotel to Atlantic
Park: Anglo-America, Port Jews and the Invisible Transmigrant
- Rainer Liedtke, An Island of Humanity in
a Sea of Barbarism? Hamburg Jewry during the Nazi Period, 1933–45
- Jonathan Goldstein,
Singapore, Manila and Harbin as Reference Points for Asian ‘Port
Jewish’ Identity
abstracts from the current issue ~ Part
I ~ Part II