I. GERMAN-JEWISH AGENCY IN TIMES OF CRISIS
DAVID JÜNGER AND ANNA ULLRICH: Introduction: German-Jewish Agency in Times of Crisis, 1914–1938
BJÖRN SIEGEL: Open the Gate: German Jews, the Foundation of Tel Aviv Port, and the Imagined Power of the Sea in 1936
SARAH PANTER: Beyond Marginalization: The (German-)Jewish Soldiers’ Agency in Times of War, 1914–1918
ANTHONY D. KAUDERS: Agency, Free Will, Self-Constitution: New Concepts for Historians of German-Jewish History between 1914 and 1938?
GABRIELE ANDERL: ‘Departure from a Sinking World’: Jewish Emigration from Austria between 1933 and 1938
MARTINA STEER: Mendelssohn on the Edge: Memory, Agency, and National Belonging in Weimar Germany
II. PERCEPTIONS OF EMOTIONS IN MODERN JEWISH HISTORY
KERSTIN VON DER KRONE: Perceptions of Emotions in Modern Jewish History: An Introduction
DOROTHEA M. SALZER: The School of Bourgeois Religion: Jewish Children, Emotions, and the Hebrew Bible
NATALIE NAIMARK-GOLDBERG: Between Love and Misogamy: Changing Perceptions of Marriage among German Jews, 1750–1800
CHRISTIAN BAILEY: Nächstenliebe in the Age of Nationalism: Reclaiming a Jewish Emotion between the Fin-de-Siècle and the First World War
III. RELIGION, CULTURE, AND SOCIETY
J. J. KIMCHE: The Bylaws of Frankfurt’s Neo-Orthodox Synagogue: A Developmental History
VIOLA ALIANOV-RAUTENBERG: From Cravat to Khaki: Gender, Sexuality, and Change in the Immigration of Fritz Wolf to Mandate Palestine
JAN KÜHNE: Dan Pagis’ Bilingual Poem ‘Ein Leben’ – An Ophthalmologic Poetics of German–Hebrew Eye Contact
TINA FRÜHAUF: Stereotypes and Jewish Musical Topics in East German Film: Ambiguities and Allosemitism in Hotel Polan und seine Gäste