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German-Speaking Jewish Refugees in Asia, 1930–1950: Shelter from the Storm?: Routledge Studies in Cultural History

Editat de Joanne Miyang Cho, Eric Kurlander, Douglas T. McGetchin
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 feb 2025
Although most perished, hundreds of thousands of Central European Jews escaped the Holocaust; tens of thousands of these Jewish refugees ended up in East Asia, Southeast Asia, or South Asia. Taking a global and transnational approach, this volume examines the cultural, political, and socioeconomic encounters among and between Asian and European states and empires, Central European Jews, and Asians between 1930 and 1950, offering important case studies that address the policies toward and experiences of German-speaking Jews across East Asia, Southeast Asia, and South Asia.
The strength of this volume lies not only in its efforts to include multiple theoretical perspectives, which integrate German, Jewish, Asian, and Migration Studies, but in the original empirical research on which it is based. Engaging directly with the rich and growing historiography on the origins, course, and consequences of the Holocaust globally and in East, Southeast, and South Asia specifically, this volume provides a framework in which we can better understand how global traditions of empire and colonialism matter in our efforts to understand the Holocaust, while indicating that Asian states and peoples were keenly aware of the so-called “Jewish Question” and made efforts, though widely differentiated, to provide shelter from the Nazi storm.
German-speaking Jewish Refugees in Asia, 1930-1950 will appeal to students and scholars alike interested in the history of Jewish refugees in the twentieth century, as well as all those interested in the modern history of Germany and Asia.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032849850
ISBN-10: 1032849851
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: 14
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Cultural History

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Academic

Cuprins

1. Introduction
 
Joanne Miyang Cho, Eric Kurlander, and Doug McGetchin
 
 
Part I. German-speaking Jewish Refugee Experience in China
 
2. Strange Havens? Shanghai, Yunnan, and Manchuria as East Asian “Solutions” 
to the “Jewish Question,” 1933 – 1941
Eric Kurlander
 
3. Shanghai Refuge: Chinese and Japanese Responses to Jewish Exiles, 1933-1945
Wendy (Xiaoxue) Sun
 
4. The German-Jewish Refugee Experience in Wartime Shanghai and Contemporary Spaces of Memory
Thomas Pekar
 
5. Shanghai Sounds: Austro-German Jewish Refugee Musicians in the City “Upon the Sea” from 1938 to 1949
Hao Huang
 
6. American Dreams: Jewish Refugees, American Servicemen, and Chinese Locals in Post-World War II Shanghai 
Kimberly Cheng
 
 
Part II. German-speaking Jewish Refugee Experience in Japan
 
7. Transcending the Holocaust: Japanese Appreciation for Jewish German Cultural Intermediaries and Their Survival in Japan
Ricky Law
 
8. The German-Jewish Business Community in Tokyo-Yokohama and the Relief Efforts for Refugees from Europe
Christian W. Spang
 
9. Wiltrud Preibisch’s Japanese Diaries: A “quarter Jew” in Japan, 1937-1944 
Kerstin Potter
 
 
Part III. German-speaking Jewish Refugee Experience in Southeast Asia
 
10. “Twice crushed within one decade”: Tracking Trajectories of Central European Jewish refugees and Relief Provision in the Philippines, 1938-1948
Simone Gigliotti
 
11. “Only Halting to Replenish Their Supplies of Fuel?” The German European Jewish Refugee Experience in the Dutch East Indies, 1933-1945
Lisbeth Rosen Jacobson
 
 
Part IV. German-speaking Jewish Refugee Experience in South Asia
 
12. The Holocaust Correspondences of Ernst Cohn-Wiener  and Maurice Laserson: Testimony to the Birth of a Jewish Aesthetics of Indian Art
Tirtha Prasad Mukhopadhyay
 
13.  An Aesthetic Hybridity: Walter Kaufmann’s Refuge in India during the Nazi Period
Shalva Weil
                       
14. Affiliations, Entanglements and “Otherness”: The Experiences of German-speaking Jewish Refugees in India, 1938–1948
Joseph Cronin
 
15.  Jewish Migration from Germany to British Ceylon in the Context of the Second World War: Orientalism and the Place of Ideas in the Migration Regime
Sebastian Musch

Notă biografică

Joanne Miyang Cho is Professor of History at William Paterson University of New Jersey. Her recent publishers include the edited volumes: Transnationalism and Migration in Modern Korea (2023), Musical Entanglements between Germany and East Asia (2021), East Asian-German Cinema (2021), and Sino-German Encounters (2021).
Eric Kurlander is William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of History and Director of Jewish Studies at Stetson University. His most recent books include Modern Germany: A Global History (2023) and Hitler’s Monsters: A Supernatural History of the Third Reich (2017).
Doug McGetchin, Associate Professor, World History, Florida Atlantic University, is a Fulbright-Nehru Scholar whose books include Modern Germany: A Global History (2023), Gendered Encounters between Germany and Asia (2016), Transcultural Encounters between Germany and India (2014), Indology, Indomania, Orientalism (2009), and Sanskrit and “Orientalism” (2004). 

Descriere

Engaging directly with the rich and growing historiography on the origins, course, and consequences of the Holocaust globally and in East, Southeast, and South Asia specifically, this volume provides a framework in which we can better understand how global traditions of empire and colonialism matter in our efforts to understand the Holocaust