Self-Assertion in the Public Sphere: The Jewish Press on the Eve of Legal Emancipation

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2016, Vol 7, Issue 8

Abstract

Jews like Adolf Fischhof and Ludwig August Frankl were prominent participants in the revolution of 1848. Their speeches, poems, and portraits circulated in Vienna and throughout the Empire. With the suppression of the revolution, most of these prominent Jews had to either leave Vienna or retreat to the private sphere. Only in the late 1850s did Jews regain their public presence, starting with the opening of the Leopoldstaedter Tempel in 1858 and the building of the Ringstrasse from 1860 onwards. Many Jews hoped that the new liberal era would grant them civil rights and legal emancipation. Jewish intellectuals and journalists supported this struggle from within and outside the growing Jewish community. An important weapon in their struggle were Jewish newspapers. These newspapers not only provided information, but also served as mouthpieces for different Jewish movements. They featured biographies with portraits (in words and images) of distinguished Jewish leaders (mostly men and a few women), which were supposed to present the social achievements of a certain group within Jewish society to a broader audience. In fact, these portraits served as a form of self-assertion for the publisher as well as for the audience. It projected the message that Jews not only merited emancipation, but also struggled for it on various levels. The paper therefore addresses questions of biography and the (Jewish) identity these portraits at once reflected and shaped.

Authors and Affiliations

Dieter J. Hecht

Keywords

Related Articles

Economic Functions of Monasticism in Cyprus: The Case of the Kykkos Monastery

The article presents a comprehensive overview of the various economic activities performed by the Kykkos Monastery in Cyprus in its long history (11th–20th centuries). The article begins with a brief review of the earl...

Prudential Versus Probative Arguments for Religious Faith: Descartes and Pascal on Reason and Faith

In this article, I show that Pascal’s prudential agenda, centered on the Wager, more successfully overcomes the restrictions of Pyrrhonic skepticism expressed by Montaigne than Descartes’ probative philosophy, which wa...

The Thin Blue Line of Theodicy: Flannery O’Connor, Teilhard de Chardin, and Competitions between Good/Good and Evil/Evil

This essay explores the concept of theodicy in Flannery O’Connor’s works of fiction. O’Connor’s fiction complicates the subjects of good and evil, moving the reader through what seem to be competitions not only between...

Women and Ultramodern Buddhism in Australia

Buddhists started arriving in Australia in large numbers during the mid-1800s, and the first Buddhist societies and centres began to be formed in the mid-late 1900s. This paper examines the role of women in bringing Bu...

Plato’s Visible God: The Cosmic Soul Reflected in the Heavens

Although Plato states that the perceptible god that he describes in Timaeus is visible to the human eye, the reflection of the Cosmic Soul in the heavens has largely been explained away or forgotten in the Western mind...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25601
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel7080109
  • Views 327
  • Downloads 6

How To Cite

Dieter J. Hecht (2016). Self-Assertion in the Public Sphere: The Jewish Press on the Eve of Legal Emancipation. Religions, 7(8), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25601