Heinrich Heine's Contested Identities: Politics, Religion, and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Germany
2000; German Studies Association; Volume: 23; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/1432684
ISSN2164-8646
AutoresGeorge F. Peters, Jost Hermand, Robert C. Holub, Heinrich Heine,
Tópico(s)German Literature and Culture Studies
ResumoContents: Jeffrey L. Sammons: Who Did Heine Think He Was? - Christhard Hoffmann: History versus Memory: Heinrich Heine and the Jewish Past - Bluma Goldstein: Heine's Hebrew Melodies: A Politics and Poetics of Diaspora - Robert C. Holub: Confessions of an Apostate: Heine's Conversion and Its Psychic Displacement - Hinrich C. Seeba: Keine Systematie: Heine in Berlin and the Origin of the Urban Gaze - Susanne Zantop: Columbus, Humboldt, Heine, or the Rediscovery of Europe - Jennifer Kapczynski/Kristin Kopp/Paul B. Reitter/Daniel Sakaguchi: The Polish Question and Heine's Exilic Identity - Jost Hermand: Tribune of the People or Aristocrat of the Spirit? Heine's Ambivalence Toward the Masses - Peter Uwe Hohendahl: Heine's Critical Intervention: The Intellectual as Poet.
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