Matthew, Henry Colin Gray et al., editors. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. http://www.oxforddnb.com/.
Judaism
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Cultural formation | Gladys Henrietta Schütze | Her family were British members of prosperous, successful Jewry. In 1884 D'Israeli
had only been dead four years and tolerance was very much the order of the day. So that anti-semitism was at a very... |
Cultural formation | Harold Pinter | |
Cultural formation | Denise Levertov | Her parents belonged to the educated, professional middle class, and were practising Christians within the Church of England
, where (even to a teenager beginning to experience doubts) the services were beautiful with candlelight and... |
Cultural formation | Amy Levy | Her time in Dresden crystallized her mixed feelings about the practice of her religion
. Visiting the synagogue (for Yom Kippur) disgusted her: she said that German Jews made her feel anti-semitic. Pullen, Christine. The Woman Who Dared: A Biography of Amy Levy. Kingston University Press, 2010. 45 |
Cultural formation | Naomi Alderman | NA
describes her parents as unorthodox Orthodox Jews
, Armitstead, Claire. “Naomi Alderman. A life in . . ”. theguardian.com, 28 Oct. 2016. “Foyles”. Naomi Alderman. About the Author. |
Cultural formation | Maya Angelou | MA
and her brother were giggling and occasionally disruptive members of the congregation of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church
in Stamps, Arkansas; she tells a hilarious comic story about a sister in the congregation who... |
Cultural formation | Hannah Arendt | Both her parents had grown up in highly cultivated Jewish homes headed by entrepreneurs who like most of the Jews of Konigsberg had roots in Russia. They were semi-observant in Judaism
and well assimilated in... |
Family and Intimate relationships | Naomi Jacob | NJ
's father, Samuel Jacob
, had started life in Germany, the country to which his father had fled as a boy from Poland, after his parents were killed in pogroms. Longer ago... |
Textual Features | Naomi Alderman | The story is set in Oxford in the year 1221, six years after a statute decreed that to guard against ethnic mixing, Jews in Britain were to wear a large patch on the front of... |
Textual Production | Maria De Fleury | MDF
published her pamphlet Poems, Occasioned by the Confinement and Acquittal of the Right Honourable Lord George Gordon
, President of the Protestant Association. Gordon the champion of Protestantism converted to Judaism
in 1786. De Bruyn, Frans. “Anti-Semitism, Millenarianism, and Radical Dissent in Edmund Burkes Reflections on the Revolution in FranceEighteenth-Century Studies, Vol. 34 , No. 4, 1 June 2001– 2024, pp. 577-00. 585 De Fleury, Maria. Poems. R. Denham, 1781. title-page |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Hélène Cixous | |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Rosita Forbes | This is partly a book about change and modernization. RF
welcomed particularly the stamping out of tribal conflict and corruption in Iran, and the tolerance newly extended to Jews
, Christians
, and Zoroastrians |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Monica Furlong | Here MF
describes a visit to the New London Synagogue
, sponsor of this publication. She writes of her delight in the singing, with its extraordinary vitality, spontaneity, and tragic beauty, the naturalness and informality... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Zadie Smith | Zen Buddhism
as well as Judaism
directs the searching of Alex's sceptical, deeply unhappy nature. His friend Adam (who consumes more pot and less booze) is both earnestly Jewish and effortlessly Zen. Fifteen years after... |
Theme or Topic Treated in Text | Gladys Henrietta Schütze | The Straight Road begins with the sensitive David Waterlow at Liverpool Street Station in London, depressed because he is saying goodbye to his friend Geoffrey, becoming fascinated by a young woman clearly in deep... |
Timeline
6 June 1391: A hostile mob of armed Christians mounted...
National or international item
6 June 1391
A hostile mob of armed Christians
mounted an attack on the Jewish
quarter of Seville in Spain.
Nirenberg, David. “Unrenounceable Core”. London Review of Books, Vol.
31
, No. 14, 23 July 2009, pp. 16-17. 16
2006: Naomi Alderman won the Orange Prize for her...
Women writers item
2006
Naomi Alderman
won the Orange Prize for her first novel, Disobedience, set in the North LondonOrthodox Jewish
community.
Steffens, Daneet. “Interview. Novelist and computer games-scripter Naomi Alderman talks to Daneet Steffens”. Mslexia, Vol.
44
, Jan. 2010, pp. 13-15. 13-15
Texts
No bibliographical results available.