462 research outputs found

    Brief von Benno Jacob an Martin Buber

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    BRIEF VON BENNO JACOB AN MARTIN BUBER Brief von Benno Jacob an Martin Buber (1r

    Brief von Bertha Badt, Hermann Badt, Benno Jacob, Jacob Rosenheim, Joseph Wittig, Hans Hess, Joseph Prager, Hermann Schafft und Unbekannt an Franz Rosenzweig

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    BRIEF VON BERTHA BADT, HERMANN BADT, BENNO JACOB, JACOB ROSENHEIM, JOSEPH WITTIG, HANS HESS, JOSEPH PRAGER, HERMANN SCHAFFT UND UNBEKANNT AN FRANZ ROSENZWEIG Brief von Bertha Badt, Hermann Badt, Benno Jacob, Jacob Rosenheim, Joseph Wittig, Hans Hess, Joseph Prager, Hermann Schafft und Unbekannt an Franz Rosenzweig (1r

    Benno Jacob Collection 1898-1975

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    Folder 1 contains several journal publications by Jacob as well as the manuscript (with author's notes?) "'Die Judenbuche : eine jüdische Studie" and the reprint "The First and Second Commandments." The pre-WWII reviews in folder 2 primarily concern Jacob's book "Auge um Auge."The following names are mentioned in this collection:Allgeier, Arthur; Beer, G.; Buechler, A.; Carlebach, Joseph; Cassuto, U.; Closen, Gustav E.; Dienemann; Eschelbacher, M.; Fink, Emanuel; Goldmann, Felix; Halevi, Perez; Herrmann, J.; Hoffmann, B.; Levinger, Wilhelm; Levy, Israel; Meinhold, J.; Michel, W.; Porges, Nathan; Posnanski, Adolf; Robinson, T.H.; Samuel, S.; Schmidt, C.Benno Jacob was born in Breslau in 1862 and attended the Jewish Theological Seminary there as well as university. During his student days he co-founded the Jewish fraternity Viadrina. He served as rabbi in Göttingen from 1891 to 1906 and Dortmund from 1906 until his retirement in 1929. In 1932 he moved to Hamburg to continue his scholarly work and fled to London in 1939. He was known for his interpretations of the Bible, particularly the Torah and published extensively on the subject. He died in London in 1945.Original German-language inventory is in folder 1.processed for digitizationdigitize

    Benno Jacob Rabbiner in Göttingen (1891-1906)

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    Softcover, DIN A5Der vorliegende Band schildert das Leben und Wirken des am 7. September 1862 im niederschlesischen Frankenstein geborenen Rabbiners Benno Jacob in Göttingen. Nach dem Studium in Breslau am „Jüdisch Theologischen Seminar (Fraenkelscher Stiftung)“ und zugleich an der dortigen Universität, war Göttingen die erste Station beruflicher Tätigkeit als Rabbiner und zudem auch der Anfang eigenen familiären Lebens

    Rethinking international relations: an interview with Benno Teschke

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    In this interview, George Souvlis and Aurélie Andry talk with Benno Teschke, author of The Myth of 1648: Class, Geopolitics and the Making of Modern International Relations, about the relationship between Marxism and international relations theory. As Teschke notes, Karl Marx never completed a book on international relations, and the lack of a coherent Marxist theory of international relations has allowed dangerous assumptions – such as instrumentalist ideas about the state, a stagist conception of history, or a universalizing capitalist world market – to take root within Marxism. Here, Teschke discusses his intellectual trajectory, the main arguments of his work, and ways of understanding capitalist internationalist relations, while also making some observations about Political Marxism, the appropriation of Carl Schmitt, and the future of the European Union

    Benno Jacob's letter to Ignaz Goldziher

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    Benno Müller-Hill, Science nazie, science de mort. L'extermination des Juifs, des Tziganes et des malades mentaux de 1933 à 1945, Paris, Éd. Odile Jacob, 1989 ; trad. fr. O. Mannon

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    Massin Benoît. Benno Müller-Hill, Science nazie, science de mort. L'extermination des Juifs, des Tziganes et des malades mentaux de 1933 à 1945, Paris, Éd. Odile Jacob, 1989 ; trad. fr. O. Mannon. In: Gradhiva : revue d'histoire et d'archives de l'anthropologie, n°9, 1991. pp. 116-118

    Illustration 63: Zeitschrift für die Buchillustration: Heft 1/1974

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    This is one of two unusual finds in a lovely Berlin used bookshop. I did not know of the magazine Illustration 63. Antiquariat Ihring had several copies, and I looked through them. Not surprisingly, there were many fables represented in the good artworks reproduced in the issues. I found two especially nicely done and took them along. Each issue of the magazine includes a set of Beilagen, individual pieces printed on their own and included inside the back cover. This issue includes two Beilagen that offer fables. Benno Huth's smaller two-colored linocut presents Canum legati ad Iovem, the dogs sent to Iove. It is a funny illustration. Alfred Pohl presents in larger format a woodcut representing Iriarte's version of Aesop's Two Goats. As might be expected, it is a dynamic illustration. What I seem to be learning from Wikipedia and German Google is that the magazine died after seventy-nine issues.Language note: German#709La Fontain
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