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Jewish Women and Their Salons: The Power of Conversation

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An insightful look at the history of Jewish women’s salons and their influence on art, music, literature, and politicsFrom their debut in Berlin in the 1780s to their emergence in 1930s California, Jewish women’s salons served as welcoming havens where all classes and creeds could openly debate art, music, literature, and politics. This fascinating book is the first to explore the history of these salons where remarkable women of intellect resolved that neither gender nor religion would impede their ability to bring about social change.Emily D. Bilski and Emily Braun examine the lives of more than a dozen Jewish salonières, charting the evolution of the salon over time and among cultures, in cities including Berlin, Vienna, Paris, London, New York, and Milan. They show how each woman uniquely adapted the salon to suit her own interests while maintaining the salon’s key characteristics of basic informality and a diversity of guests. Other distinguished contributors to the volume discuss in detail the Berlin salons of the 1800s; the salon in terms of Jewish acculturation and its relation to gender and music; and the relations of Marcel Proust, Oscar Wilde, and Gertrude Stein to the literary salon. The book is enriched with a lavish array of illustrations, including documentary photographs, paintings, drawings, prints, and decorative arts.Among the salonières portrayed in the Herz, the first Jewish woman to host a salonAda Leverson, who welcomed Oscar Wilde to her salon even after his controversial arrestAnna Kuliscioff, an activist ardently opposed to the oppression of womenMargherita Sarfatti, who acted as Mussolini’s political partnerGertrude Stein, an expatriate whose famous salon has been deemed the first museum of modern artExhibition Jewish Museum, New York, March 4 – July 10, 2005McMullen Museum of Art, Boson College, September – December, 2005Published in association with The Jewish Museum, New YorkEmily D. Bilski is an independent scholar and curator specializing in nineteenth- and twentieth-century art and cultural history. Emily Braun is professor of art history at Hunter College and the Graduate Center at the City University of New York.

280 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2005

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April 21, 2024
TRUE CONFESSION! I actually did not read this book. I could only look at the pictures.
Correction. It’s not that I did not read this book, I could not read this book. The print is microscopic and reflective. So I went through and wrote down the names of people of interest that I will research at a future date. And by the way, I was all over the Internet, trying to find a digital version and even tried to contact the authors. Do I sound frustrated? Well, yes. It looks like a really interesting book. :-(
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