Hi, all.

I am in a webinar now on a new special issue of the Journal of Austrian 
Studies that is devoted to Czernowitz.

ANK: The Journal of Austrian Studies: Webinar: Czernowitz (19.02.2021)


The Journal of Austrian Studies presents a JAS Webinar: Czernowitz

Co-sponsored by the Center for Austrian Studies and the Center for 
Jewish Studies

of the University of Minnesota.

I have not yet read the journal, but I am sure it will be of interest to 
list members.

Here is an excerpt from the introduction.

"In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

"From the Editors
Leslie Morris and Joseph Moser

"Czernowitz, the legendary city of German-speaking Austrian culture in 
Eastern Europe and the birthplace of Paul Celan and Rosa Ausländer as 
well as many other writers and artists, has not received much attention 
in Austrian Studies. Situated on the edge of the contiguous 
German-speaking territories of Europe, Czernowitz was a linguistic 
exclave in which Yiddish-speaking Jews from Galicia settled after the 
Austrians took control of Bukovina in 1775. Famous not only for the 
prominent German-language poets it produced, Czernowitz also played a 
major role in the formation of a modern Yiddish literature, as the site 
of the first international Yiddish Conference in 1908. Within this 
multilingual environment under Austrian rule, where Romanian and 
Ukrainian were the main languages, Galician Jews assimilated from 
Yiddish to German and built an almost utopian German-speaking 
Austrian-Jewish city. By the turn of the twentieth century, Czernowitz 
was a model Austrian city, culturally, linguistically, and 
architecturally. German-speaking Jews, who formed a large minority in 
the city, felt more secure here than anywhere else in the Habsburg 
Empire, yet this utopian sense of harmony was undermined by underlying 
ethnic conflicts and a deeply embedded antisemitism and was interrupted 
by World War I. Notwithstanding, Austrian-Jewish culture had established 
itself so firmly before 1914 that it was able to continue under Romanian 
control, despite oppressive language laws, until the Soviet invasion in 
1940, which was followed by the invasion of the Romanian Fascists and 
the German Nazis a year later in 1941, which destroyed Jewish life and 
culture in the city.

"Czernowitz has long served as a cipher of sorts for thinking about the 
now-lost spaces of Jewish life in eastern Europe. Certainly, in the 
field of German Studies, the prominence of the city's two best-known 
poets, Celan and Ausländer, have brought some attention to the role 
Czernowitz played in the formation of a multilingual Jewish poetics. And 
yet, despite scholarship [End Page xi] in the field on the foundational 
role Czernowitz played for Celan and Ausländer, not to mention for the 
development of modern Yiddish culture, scant attention has been paid to 
the cultural and historical significance of the city and to the complex 
mechanism of nostalgia and memory in reclaiming this legendary lost 
space that, nonetheless, still exists. This special issue of the Journal 
of Austrian Studies attempts to address this gap in scholarship about 
Czernowitz. The idea for this issue emerged from a three-panel series, 
organized by Leslie Morris and Joseph Moser at the 2017 German Studies 
Association conference in Atlanta, aimed at covering a wide range of 
cultural and literary topics on the former capital of the Austrian 
crownland Bukovina. The goal of this special issue with six articles is 
to present Czernowitz from a variety of angles and to enhance the 
understanding of this complex, fraught, yet celebrated place in Austrian 
and Jewish cultural history.

"Andrei Corbea-Hoisie's article "Die Czernowitzer deutschsprachige 
Presse vor und nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg" examines the role of the 
Germanlanguage press in Czernowitz as a tool for colonizing the eastern 
portion of the Habsburg Empire between 1848 and 1914, in the context of 
other Germanlanguage newspapers across Austria-Hungary. Journalism in 
Czernowitz was unique, as the newspapers were not written by an exclave 
German minority but rather by Jewish journalists who had assimilated 
from Yiddish to German, carrying out this effort of colonization on 
behalf of the Habsburg officials. The Jews saw in German a supranational 
language that could stem the nationalist trends of the time and area and 
support the multicultural ethos of the Habsburg Empire that was so 
beneficial to the Jews. This Jewish German-language press in Czernowitz 
was confronted with a reactionary and nationalist antisemitic press in 
Czernowitz. Even after the takeover of Bukovina by Romania in 1918, 
Czernowitz's Jewish bourgeoisie managed to maintain a German-language 
press in the city until the Soviet invasion in 1940, even if the ties to 
Vienna were severed with the end of World War I. Corbea-Hoisie makes the 
important argument that the German language served less to nurture 
Habsburg nostalgia after 1918..."


The full issue is available through Project Muse.

Jim

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