Conversion and Catastrophe in German-Jewish Émigré Autobiography

By Abraham Rubin
Categories: History, World History
Series: German and European Studies
Publisher: University of Toronto Press, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Hardcover : 9781487557348, 232 pages, November 2024
Ebook (PDF) : 9781487557355, 232 pages, December 2024
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781487557362, 232 pages, December 2024
Paperback : 9781487561093, 232 pages, December 2024

Table of contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Conversion and the Problem of Persuasion

1. Conversion and the Question of German Guilt in Karl Jakob Hirsch’s Heimkehr zu Gott (1946)

2. The Suppressed Jewish Voice in Alfred Döblin’s Schicksalsreise (1949)

3. Mixed Metaphors of Jewish Blindness in Karl Stern’s The Pillar of Fire (1951)

4. The Postwar Politics of Judeo-Christian Reconciliation and the Inability to Mourn in Heinrich Kronstein’s Briefe an einen jungen Deutschen (1967)

Conclusion: The Consolations of Christianity and the Inadequacy of Form

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

Conversion and Catastrophe in German-Jewish Émigré Autobiography is a collective biography of four German-Jewish converts to Christianity, recounting their spiritual and confessional journeys against the backdrop of the Holocaust and its aftermath. Focusing on personal testimonies that fuse historical trauma and spiritual illumination into one narrative, the book explores how Jewish emigrants interpreted their experiences of persecution and displacement through the hermeneutics of Christian conversion. It draws on autobiographies, novels, religious writings, and newspaper articles as well as unpublished archival materials such as diaries, lecture notes, and private correspondence.

The book explores how chosen genres of writing both enabled and hindered self-understanding. It also assesses whether the literary paradigm of Christian conversion, highlighting an individual’s separation from a past sinful self, is suitable for expressing a collective catastrophe. Applying psychoanalysis, disability studies, and autobiographical theory to the life writing of converted Jews, the book offers new avenues for conceptualizing the Jewishness of historical subjects who disavowed their ties to Judaism.

Published in association with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.