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Out of the Ghetto - The Social Background of Jewish Emancipation 1770-1870

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Book by Katz, Jacob

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1973

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Jacob Katz

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
229 reviews
July 29, 2021
This is a classic work studying the Jews of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in German, Austrian and (a little bit of) French lands. It examines the classic cast of characters--Mendelssohn, Wessely, von Dohm, Napoleon Sanhedrin, etc.--in describing the profound changes that were to lead Jews “out of the ghetto” and into the general cultural mainstream. In many ways, it’s a bit like a textbook of the years 1770-1830. But that said, Katz makes a clear argument as well.
Katz argues that the growth of the modern state provided the space and the impetus for these changes in Jewish society. However, he also notes a Hegelian dialectic that within the new modern worldview was the emerging threads of modern anti-semitism that would later spell the destruction of the modern Jewish community. His other main argument is that the trajectory of Jewish emancipation is similar across political boundaries throughout west-central Europe if one looks at it from a social history perspective--nowhere was the transformation, in law and in gentile attitude, an automatic one but rather it progressed in fits and starts over decades. Emancipation “failed” to fully integrate the Jews because they still wanted to maintain aspects of their group identity.
Like in “Tradition and Crisis,” he discusses a bit about neutral space (although that point is more of a factor in the former work).
Profile Image for Russel Henderson.
749 reviews10 followers
April 2, 2018
I understand subsequent scholarship has improved understanding of the time period, but by and large the book holds up quite well. He does an excellent job paralleling the two huge changes taking place in the European Jewish community of the time, the movement toward political emancipation and the changes within Judaism itself, the schisms in the conservative approaches to the faith occasioned by the political and social freedoms but also by the wider European intellectual trends of the Enlightenment, the Revolutionary Era and the period thereafter.
Profile Image for Nat W.
10 reviews
April 28, 2024
This book touches on a crucial time in Jewish history and lays the geopolitical foundation of modern European Jewish history. My only two qualms are 1) it is very hard to read, especially the first few chapters and 2) this almost solely focuses on European Jewry but does not touch on the geopolitical landscape of Sephardi or Mizrahi Jews during this same time.
Profile Image for Arlian Sorkal.
26 reviews
February 1, 2015
Very good. It has answers for many larger and smaller questions about the process of Jewish Emancipation.
Profile Image for F.
101 reviews1 follower
August 15, 2012
Very good. It has answers for many larger and smaller questions about the process of Jewish Emancipation.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews