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Jewish Women and Their Salons: The Power of Conversation (Jewish Museum)
 
 
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Jewish Women and Their Salons: The Power of Conversation (Jewish Museum) [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Emily D. Bilski , Emily Braun , Leon Botstein

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From their debut in Berlin in the 1780s to their emergence in 1930s California, Jewish women's salons served as welcoming havens where all classes and creeds could openly debate art, music, literature and politics. This fascinating book is the first to explore the history of these salons where remarkable women of intellect resolved that neither gender nor religion would impede their ability to bring about social change. Emily Bilski and Emily Braun examine the lives of more than a dozen Jewish salonieres, charting the evolution of the salon over time and among cultures, in cities including Berlin, Vienna, Paris, London, New York and Milan. They show how each woman uniquely adapted the salon to suit her own interests while maintaining the salon's key characteristics of basic informality and a diversity of guests. Other distinguished contributors to the volume discuss in detail the Berlin salons of the 1800s; the salon in terms of Jewish acculturation and its relation to gender and music; and the relations of Marcel Proust, Oscar Wilde and Gertrude Stein to the literary salon. The book is enriched with a lavish array of illustrations, including documentary photographs, paintings, drawings, prints and decorative arts. Exhibition schedule: The Jewish Museum, New York, 4 March to 10 July 2005, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, September to December 2005.

Synopsis

From their debut in Berlin in the 1780s to their emergence in 1930s California, Jewish women's salons served as welcoming havens where all classes and creeds could openly debate art, music, literature and politics. This fascinating book is the first to explore the history of these salons where remarkable women of intellect resolved that neither gender nor religion would impede their ability to bring about social change. Emily Bilski and Emily Braun examine the lives of more than a dozen Jewish salonieres, charting the evolution of the salon over time and among cultures, in cities including Berlin, Vienna, Paris, London, New York and Milan. They show how each woman uniquely adapted the salon to suit her own interests while maintaining the salon's key characteristics of basic informality and a diversity of guests. Other distinguished contributors to the volume discuss in detail the Berlin salons of the 1800s; the salon in terms of Jewish acculturation and its relation to gender and music; and the relations of Marcel Proust, Oscar Wilde and Gertrude Stein to the literary salon.

The book is enriched with a lavish array of illustrations, including documentary photographs, paintings, drawings, prints and decorative arts. Exhibition schedule: The Jewish Museum, New York, 4 March to 10 July 2005, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, September to December 2005.


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11 von 13 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
A UNIQUE GEM 30. August 2005
Von I. W. Gittleman - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
For the earlier part of this analysis, I would like to retitle the book 'Salons'.

I know of no book that devotes its contents to the past two hundred years' cultural entity of the 'salon'. [For that matter I don't know of any book that devotes itself solely to the cultural entity of its 'equivalent' -- the 'musical(e)'.]

By provisionally eliminating the 'Jewish' or 'female' associations in the book, the study of the 'salon' as a cultural entity is unique itself.

Then coupled with the 'female' as the main creator and motivator of the salon is surely mind-expanding.

Then, in addition, (to those interested) to add the Jewish aspect (which, again, if one is interested) with its many associations (Jew and still German or Austro-Hungarian; the 'Court Jew'; voluntary conversion (or 'slipping away, or intermarriage) of some Jews, and its association with anti-Semitism, or just the desire to be 'less Jewish', the prominent place of many Jews in European history, etc., etc.) is surely a plus.

Now, to the physical aspect of the book: Its binding, quality of the paper, and quality of the (many colored) reproductions, are first quality.

Its content is unequaled with its seven introductory articles by the editors, the four monographs by other authorities; then the most interesting biographies of the female 'salon-keepers' [!!!]; and finally the fine notes, biblography and index.

To recapitulate: Physically this is a fine production; the subject (the salon) is a real contribution; plus the important function of the female (I can't think of any male 'salonniere'), and, to those interested, the importance of the Jew in the cultural history of particularly Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, this a unique and entirely 'satisfying' production.

Jew or non Jew, if you are at all interested in this contribution to the culture of the 'western' world, the purchase of this book is a MUST.
7 von 8 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Jewish Women's Power 24. Februar 2006
Von Rachelle Feldman - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
The book on the Salons was part of the Jewish Museum (NYC) show last spring. I saw the show and the book is now a tool I use for research. The women and their salons include some of the most influental and creative forces through the centuries. The book is also worth having as table top book, for your salon/living room as a way to stimulate converstions when your friends gather. Biliski is to be commended for her work on a topic Jewish Women have been waiting for.
A fascinating survey 9. März 2012
Von Ralph Blumenau - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
The remarkable phenomenon of Jewish women or women of Jewish origin presiding over salons in Berlin, from the 1780s onwards but mainly in the first decade or so of the 19th century, is quite well known, and it is part of the story told in this excellent and lavishly illustrated book. But that story set in a much wider context. There is first a fine chapter setting out the nature and importance of the salons in 18th century France. The women who presided over these were not Jewish, but here, as later, they opened up cultural discourse away from conservative learned institutions, created a private place where there was civility and freedom of speech, where progressive ideas were entertained, where an "egalitarian sociability" was practised and where a sphere was created in which women were able to escape the subordinate role which the prevailing legal system still assigned to them.

For Jewish women the salons did all that for them, and more: not only were they able to escape from social and gender prejudice but, to some extent, from religious prejudice also. They believed in acculturation and shared the German aspiration for "Bildung"; and they were undoubtedly helped by the fact that their fathers and/or husbands were for the most part wealthy bankers who had already been granted the status of Privileged Jews, who had been able to mix with gentiles and who provided the expenses associated with often lavish hospitality (especially where this involved hosting musical or theatrical events). Enlightened circles in Germany met them half-way; even so, most of these women felt that they would become more acceptable if they converted to Christianity. Only one of the famous German salonnières, Amalie Beer, remained true to Judaism. Conversion did not lay all prejudices to rest: in 1811 even some of the people who had frequented their salons joined the Christian-German Dining Club, which excluded "women, Frenchmen, Philistine and Jews", the latter including any converts back to the third generation; and soon after that time, as religious anti-Judaism mutated into racial antisemitism, the German-Jewish salons faded out.

The book goes on to tell, in ever more detail as it moved from the early to the late 19th and 20th century, of Jewish salonnières in other countries, though without any analysis of why, after emancipation, Jewish women were still so prominent. There was as much concentration of them in Paris at the end of the 19th century as there had been in Berlin at the century's beginning. For all the antisemitism that was rife there, there were several prominent Jewish salonnières (some of whom inspired characters in Proust's work). Madame Armand de Caillavet had a literary and political salon. Edith Wharton describes the salon of Comtesse Rosalie de FitzJames as "the most prestigious in Paris"; Madame Guillaume Beer had a salon like the one that had been held in Berlin by Amalie Beer (her husband's great-grandmother). But the most famous of them was Geneviève Straus, daughter of the opera composer Fromental Halévy and widow of Georges Bizet (Émile Straus was her second husband), who "drew more titled nobility to her salon than did any other hostess in Paris", and also Debussy, Gounod, Fauré and Hahn. Even the antisemitic Goncourts could not stay away. It became a stronghold of the Dreyfusards, but that would also lead to the "dénouement" of her and other Jewish salons, as the aristocrats and right-wing writers closed ranks with the the anti-Dreyfusards. But then after around 1906 the American-born Gertrude Stein's salon would "again put a Jewish hostess at the apex of Parisian society".

In London Ada Leverson hosted a salon known for its wit and dandyism: Oscar Wilde, Aubrey Beardsley, Max Beerbohm, Walter Sickert, John Singer Sargent were among its habitués as well as people from the acting world like Mrs Patrick Campell.

There is a chapter on the doughty Russian-born revolutionary Anna Kuliskioff, who left Tsarist Russia and eventually ended up in Milan where she lived with the Socialist leader Filippo Turati and from the 1890s to her death in 1925 presided over a radical salon for anyone from the left and of whatever class. Her visitors "arrived in shifts, twice daily, after lunch and in the evening before dinner".

Other Jewish salonnières were champions of Modernism in art: Felicie Bernstein in Berlin promoted Impressionism, Berta Zuckerkandl in Vienna the Sezession, Margherita Sarfatti in Milan the Futurists and, later, Novecento school of neo-classicism - both schools closely allied to fascism. Sarfatti was, from 1913 to 1933, in all senses, an intimate of Mussolini and an influential political figure. When Mussolini adopted racial laws in 1933, she fled Italy. She returned after the war, but was then treated as a pariah.

In the United States there was the witty American-born artist Florine Stettheimer in New York, and the émigrée Salka Viertel from Vienna in California, whose salon was one of the most star-studded in the book (film people, musicians, literary giants like Thomas Mann and Berthold Brecht and others who represented "the true Fatherland."

The book ends with three thought-provoking essays: Barbara Hahn stresses the strains experienced by hostesses of Jewish origin (and points out that the word salon was first applied retrospectively in the 1840s to the gatherings over which they provided); Leon Rotstein is very interesting about Wagner's antisemitism which associated domestic music-making and the music he disliked with femininity.

One might get the impression from this book that, after the 18th century, the salons were a purely Jewish phenomenon. Doubtlessly their number was disproportionate (and that would have merited an explanation), but salons hosted by non-Jewish women make no appearance at all. Yet the Wikipedia article on salons lists a number of them. Of course they are not the subject of this book; but their total omission is a slight drawback to this fascinating book.

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