I. GERMAN-JEWISH INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT FROM THE LATE EIGHTEENTH TO THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
MOSHE CARMILLY-WEINBERGER: The Similarities and Relationship Between the Jüdisch-Theologisches Seminar (Breslau) and the Rabbinical Seminary (Budapest)
EDWARD BREUER: The Deutsche Encyclopädie and the Jews
MICHAEL NAGEL: The Beginnings of Jewish Children’s Literature in High German: Three Schoolbooks from Berlin (1779), Prague (1781) and Dessau (1782)
MOSHE PELLI: When Did Haskalah Begin? Establishing the Beginning of HaskalahLiterature and the Definition of “Modernism”
JACOB GOLOMB: Thus Spoke Herzl: Nietzsche’s Presence in Herzl’s Life and Work
II. JEWISH COMMUNITIES IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY
JACOB BORUT: The Province versus Berlin? Relations between Berlin and the Other Communities as a Factor in German Jewish Organisational History at the End of the Nineteenth Century
DAVID ELLENSON: The Israelitische Gebetbücher of Abraham Geiger and Manuel Joël: A Study in Nineteenth-Century German-Jewish Communal Liturgy and Religion
III. JEWISH EXPERIENCES IN THE WEIMAR REPUBLIC AND NATIONAL-SOCIALIST GERMANY
KATHARINA S. FEIL: Art Under Siege: The Art Scholarship of Rachel Wischnitzer in Berlin, 1921–1938
SABINE THIEM: Kurt Sabatzky: The C. V. Syndikus of the Jewish Community in Königsberg during the Weimar Republic
YFAAT WEISS: Polish and German Jews Between Hitler’s Rise to Power and the Outbreak of the Second World War
IV. JEWISH REFUGEES AND DISPLACED PERSONS
BARBARA GELDERMANN: “Jewish Refugees Should Be Welcomed and Assisted Here!” Shanghai: Exile and Return
EVA KOLINKSY: Experiences of Survival
V. A CASE STUDY
STEVEN R. WELCH: Mischling Deserters from the Wehrmacht