<b>Posits a New German Jewish Literature that has surprising implications for today's German Jewish - and Jewish - identity including solidarity with others even after October 7 2023.</b><br><br><br>Eighty years after the Holocaust it is now possible to speak of a New German Jewish Literature. Emerging out of a community that following the arrival of more than 200000 people of Jewish ancestry from the former Soviet Union is now vastly larger increasingly diverse and culturally vibrant German Jewish writers are re-articulating what it means to be Jewish in the land of the perpetrators. More generally they are also rethinking Jewish values and Jewish solidarity against the backdrop of global events and trends such as the resurgence of antisemitism the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and growing intolerance toward ethnic religious and sexual minorities.<br><br>Stuart Taberner's book provides the first comprehensive account of the tension between Jewish particularism and Jewish universalism that characterizes this New German Jewish Literature. To what extent should Jewish identity be focused on the Jewishness of the Jewish experience including the Holocaust? Or does Jewish purpose reside in expressing solidarity with persecuted minorities everywhere? Taberner argues that this new literature presents an aesthetically engaging and politically nuanced deliberation on Holocaust memory on worldliness and on solidarity - with sometimes surprising and radical implications for modern-day German Jewish and Jewish identity. He also examines authors' responses to the Hamas attack on Israel of October 7 2023 and speculates about the future of German Jewish writing.<br><br>This book is available as Open Access under the Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND.
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