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Contested Heritage Jewish Cultural Property after 1945 / Caroline Jessen, Enrico Lucca, Elisabeth Gallas, Yehuda Dvorkin, Adi Livny, Joachim Schlör, Iris Lauterbach, Bilha Shilo, Yfaat Weiss, Gil Rubin, Yonatan Shiloh-Dayan, Ada Wardi, Stefanie Mahrer, Anna Holzer-Kawałko, Anna Holzer-Kawalko, Amit Levy, Yechiel Weizmann, Lina Barouch.

By: Jessen, Caroline [author,, editor.]Contributor(s): Lucca, Enrico [author.] | Gallas, Elisabeth [author,, editor.] | Dvorkin, Yehuda [author.] | Livny, Adi [author.] | Schlör, Joachim [author.] | Lauterbach, Iris [author.] | Shilo, Bilha [author.] | Weiss, Yfaat [author,, editor.] | Rubin, Gil [author.] | Shiloh-Dayan, Yonatan [author.] | Wardi, Ada [author.] | Mahrer, Stefanie [author.] | Holzer-Kawałko, Anna [author.] | Holzer-Kawalko, Anna [editor.] | Levy, Amit [author.] | Weizmann, Yechiel [author.] | Barouch, Lina [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Edition: 1 edDescription: 1 online resource (1 p.)ISBN: 9783666310836Subject(s): Social Science / Jewish Studies | Social sciencesGenre/Form: Electronic books.Online resources: View this content on Open Research Library. Summary: In the wake of the Nazi regime's policies, European Jewish cultural property was dispersed, dislocated, and destroyed. Books, manuscripts, and artworks were either taken by their fleeing owners and were transferred to different places worldwide, or they fell prey to systematic looting and destruction under German occupation. Until today, a significant amount of items can be found in private and public collections in Germany as well as abroad with an unclear or disputed provenance. Contested Heritage. Jewish Cultural Property after 1945 illuminates the political and cultural implications of Jewish cultural property looted and displaced during the Holocaust. The volume includes seventeen essays, accompanied by newly discovered archival material and illustrations, which address a wide range of topics: from the shifting meaning and character of the objects themselves, the so-called object biographies, their restitution processes after 1945, conflicting ideas about their appropriate location, political interests in their preservation, actors and networks involved in salvage operations, to questions of intellectual and cultural transfer processes revolving around the moving objects and their literary resonances. Thus, it offers a fascinating insight into lesser-known dimensions of the aftermath of the Holocaust and the history of Jews in postwar Europe.
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In the wake of the Nazi regime's policies, European Jewish cultural property was dispersed, dislocated, and destroyed. Books, manuscripts, and artworks were either taken by their fleeing owners and were transferred to different places worldwide, or they fell prey to systematic looting and destruction under German occupation. Until today, a significant amount of items can be found in private and public collections in Germany as well as abroad with an unclear or disputed provenance. Contested Heritage. Jewish Cultural Property after 1945 illuminates the political and cultural implications of Jewish cultural property looted and displaced during the Holocaust. The volume includes seventeen essays, accompanied by newly discovered archival material and illustrations, which address a wide range of topics: from the shifting meaning and character of the objects themselves, the so-called object biographies, their restitution processes after 1945, conflicting ideas about their appropriate location, political interests in their preservation, actors and networks involved in salvage operations, to questions of intellectual and cultural transfer processes revolving around the moving objects and their literary resonances. Thus, it offers a fascinating insight into lesser-known dimensions of the aftermath of the Holocaust and the history of Jews in postwar Europe.

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