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News

Now out: New Issue of Naharaim [Vol. 16, Issue 1]

17 July, 2022

We are pleased to announce the publication of the latest issue of its journal, Naharaim: Journal of German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History (Zeitschrift für deutsch-jüdische Literatur und Kulturgeschichte) [Volume 16, No. 1].

This issue includes the first scholarly study of the author’s library of German-Hebrew aphoristic poet Elazar Benyoëtz, which the Rosenzweig Minerva Center received as a gift last year.

 

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Now out: New Issue of Naharaim [Vol. 15, Issue 2]

Now out: New Issue of Naharaim [Vol. 15, Issue 2]

18 January, 2022
We are 

pleased to announce the publication of the latest issue of its journal, Naharaim: Journal of German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History (Zeitschrift für deutsch-jüdische Literatur und Kulturgeschichte) [Volume 15, Issue 2].

Online Book Launch: The Return to the Archive (Schwerpunkt, JBDI XVII) To:

21 January, 2021

The Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Research Center and the Leibniz Institute for Jewish History and Culture – Simon Dubnow are delighted to invite you to the online launch of the focal point (Schwerpunkt) "The Return to the Archive: Dispersal, Transmission, and Anticipation in Personal Archives between Germany and Israel", which appeared recently in Volume XVII of the Dubnow Institute Yearbook.

THE FIRST ANNUAL NAHARAIM SYMPOSIUM

6 January, 2021

The Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Research Center (FRMRC) and Naharaim: Journal of German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History are delighted to invite you to the first annual Naharaim Symposium, which will take place online on Thursday, January 14, 2021, at 20:00 (UTC+2). Aimed at hosting leading and promising scholars, the Naharaim Symposium is a platform for discussing topics and methodologies in the study of German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History. 

A new Podcast: A scenic re-enactment of Viktor Frankl‘s play from 1946: Synchronisation in Birkenwald — Eine metaphysisches Konferenz

2 September, 2020

The production is the culmination of an artist-research project, which developed in several stages over the past five years. Thereby, for the first time, Frankl‘s play was translated into Hebrew and staged in a dramatic reading with professional actors under the artistic direction of Prof. Shimon Levy, an eminent theatre scholar and director.

 The production is available as a podcast: