Jewish Studies

Preserving the Legacy of German Jewry

A History of the Leo Baeck Institute, 1955–2005
Ed. by Christhard Hoffmann

[Die Bewahrung der deutsch-jüdischen Erinnerung. Eine Geschichte des Leo Baeck Institutes, 1955 – 2005.]

unveränderte eBook-Ausgabe 2024; Orginalausgabe 2005; 2005. XIV, 474 pages.

Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts 70

eBook PDF
ISBN 978-3-16-163599-1
Open Access: CC BY-SA 4.0
Sponsored by: Bundesministerium des Innern und für Heimat
Published in English.
Founded in May 1955 in Jerusalem by German-Jewish intellectuals who had survived the Holocaust the Leo Baeck Institute of Jews from Germany (LBI) has been engaged in preserving the legacy of German Jewry by collecting material, doing research, and presenting historical narratives. Published on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of its founding, the present volume is the first to reconstruct the LBI's fascinating history.
Founded in May 1955 in Jerusalem by German-Jewish intellectuals who had survived the Holocaust – among them Martin Buber, Ernst Simon, Gershom Scholem, and Robert Weltsch – the Leo Baeck Institute of Jews from Germany (LBI) has been engaged in preserving the legacy of German Jewry by collecting material, doing research, and presenting historical narratives. With its working centers in New York, London and Jerusalem (supplemented since 1989 with the Wissenschaftliche Arbeitsgemeinschaft in Germany), the LBI has made German-Jewish studies a prominent field of research that has attracted scholars and the general public well beyond the original circle of German-speaking Jewish émigrés.
Published on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of its founding, the present volume is the first to reconstruct the LBI's fascinating history, from its beginnings as a memorial community of surviving German Jews to its present status as an internationally renowned research institute. The authors are social and cultural historians from various countries, the majority of whom are not directly affiliated with the LBI.
Survey of contents
Foreword by Michael A. MeyerChristhard Hoffmann: Introduction – Christhard Hoffmann: The Founding of the Leo Baeck Institute, 1945–1955 – Ruth Nattermann: Diversity within Unity: The Community of Founders – Guy Miron: From Memorial Community to Research Center: The Leo Baeck Institute in Jerusalem – Mitchell B. Hart: »Here it is, to an Astounding Degree, Saved«: The Leo Baeck Institute in New York , 1956–2000 – Nils Roemer: The Making of a New Discipline: The London LBI and the Writing of the German-Jewish Past – Stefanie Schüler-Springorum: The »German Question«: The Leo Baeck Institute in Germany – Aubrey Pomerance: Coordination, Confrontation and Co-operation: The International Board of the Leo Baeck Institute – Miriam Gebhardt: The Lost World of German Jewry: Collecting, Preserving and Reading Memories – Christhard Hoffmann: An International Forum of German-Jewish Studies: The Year Book of the Leo Baeck Institute – Christian Wiese: A Master Narrative? The Gesamtgeschichte of German Jewry in Historical Context – Till van Rahden: Treason, Fate, or Blessing? Narratives of Assimilation in the Historiography of German-Speaking Jewry since the 1950s – Jürgen Matthäus: Between Fragmented Memory and »Real History«: The LBI's Perception of Jewish Self-Defence against Nazi Antisemitism, 1955–1970 – Andreas Kilcher: Grandeur and Collapse of the German-Jewish Symbiosis: Hans Tramer and the Jewish Literary Criticism of the Leo Baeck Institute – Robert Liberles: Looking Forward: a Global Research Community as the Cornerstone of the LBI Program
Authors/Editors

Christhard Hoffmann ist Professor of Modern European History and Head of the Department of Archaeology, History, Cultural Studies and Religion, University of Bergen (Norway).

Reviews

The following reviews are known:

In: Das Historisch-Politische Buch — 54 (2006), S. 323–324 (Martin Liepach)
In: Mnemosyne — Jg.30 (2005), S.275ff (Evelyn Adunka)
In: Werkstatt Geschichte — 45 (2007), S. 129–130 (Michael Wildt)
In: Süddeutsche Zeitung – F — 18. Juli 2005, Nr.163, S.14 (Ulrich Wyrwa)
In: DeutschlandRadio — 01.07.2005, 15.50 Uhr (David Dambitsch)
In: Zion — Vol.71 (2005/06), H.1, S.134
In: Theologische Literaturzeitung — 133 (2008), S. 1318–1320 (Hans-Michael Haußig)