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Karl Emil Franzos, an Austrian-Jewish novelist, wrote "The Jews of Barnow" in the nineteenth century. This moving piece illustrates the daily routines and difficulties of a Jewish community in the fictitious Eastern European village of Barnow. The work beautifully captures the Jewish inhabitants' characters and habits, providing a rich and compassionate glimpse into their everyday routines, traditions, and aspirations. Franzos immerses readers in the inner lives of Barnow's Jewish people, demonstrating their pleasures and sufferings as a minority population in a mostly non-Jewish milieu. The plot centres around Reb David, a respected member of the community, and his trials and tribulations s...
"For the Right" from Karl Emil Franzos. Popular Austrian novelist of the late the 19th century (1848-1904).
A biography of the Austrian Jewish writer (who settled in Berlin in 1887), whose works centered around the life of Eastern European peoples, including Jews. Attentive to the sufferings of Eastern European Jews, he criticized them for their conservatism, backwardness, and separateness. He spoke for the emancipation of Jews through ethnic assimilation with Germans, and was hostile to Zionism. Franzos believed that the Jews' being a "nation, " rather than a religious group, was responsible for antisemitism; his ideal was "a denationalized Jewry."
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The Chief Justice by Karl Emil Franzos is about the troubles of Chief Justice von Sendlingen of Vienna, who finds out that a dear, past friend has been convicted of child murder. Excerpt: "In the Higher Court of Bolosch, an important Germano-Slavonic town of northern Austria, there sat as Chief Justice some thirty years ago, one of the bravest and best of those men on whom true justice might hopefully rely in that sorely tried land. Charles Victor, Baron von Sendlingen, as he may be called in this record of his fate, was the last descendant of a very ancient and meritorious race which could trace its origin to a collateral branch of the Franconian Emperors..."
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"The Chief Justice" from Karl Emil Franzos. Popular Austrian novelist of the late the 19th century (1848-1904).
Franzos showed the attitudes of the 19th-century assimilated Jew in their best light. His conviction that Germanisation was the way forward was based on the idealistic strain in German culture and will have looked very different in his day to a post-Holocaust perspective. He believed, following the example of Friedrich Schiller, that literature should have an ethical purpose, but he managed to express that purpose through a range of vivid characters who still have the power to move the modern reader. Galicia and Bukovina were the most backward, the poorest provinces of the Austrian Empire, so that Franzos saw his promotion of Germanisation as part of an attempt to improve conditions there po...
"The Jews of Barnow" from Karl Emil Franzos. Popular Austrian novelist of the late the 19th century (1848-1904).