The Portrayal of Jews in European Theatre and Opera, 1830-1940
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22029/ko.2009.488Abstract
Editors Bayerdörfer, Fischer, and Halbach from the Institute for Theatre Studies of Ludwig-Maximilians-University in Munich assemble in their volume Judenrollen (Jewish Roles) 21 essays on the depiction of Jews in European theatre from the Restauration through the post-WWI era. There are not only analyses of theatre pieces like Albert Dulk's Lea or Arthur Schnitzler's comedy Professor Bernhardi, but also works of opera like those by Hans Pfitzner or Vincent d'Indy. The question how Jewish figures appear on stage is shown in its connection to the epoch which spans from the beginning of Jewish emancipation in Germany to its cancellation by the national socialists. Important questions are: which possibilities are available for Jewish figures, from which positions they are kept away, and which changes in their role profile are imposed on them. All in all, the present volume displays the various and multifaceted careers of Jewish figures in opera and theatre of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
All articles (not book covers) in KULT_online from issue 50 on are published under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. All published articles may be reused under the conditions of the license, particularly for commercial purposes and through editing the article (Human-Readable Summary). All authors (have) permitted the publication under the above mentioned license. There is no copyright transfer towards KULT_online. For all book covers specific rights might be reserved, please contact the respective publisher for any lawful reuse. All contributions published in issue 1-49 of KULT_online are free available online and protected by the German Copyright Law.