Academic literature on the topic 'Judenplatz'

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Journal articles on the topic "Judenplatz"

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Silverman, Lisa. "Leopoldstadt, Judenplatz, and Beyond." East Central Europe 42, no. 2-3 (January 20, 2015): 249–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763308-04202004.

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Discussions of Jews’ relationship to Vienna before 1938 tend to focus on their consumption of Viennese culture, including music, art, literature, and intellectual innovation. However, understanding place as a formative aspect of material culture can help us see another crucial aspect of how Jews—individually and collectively—came to terms with their place in the city. This essay examines the significance of place for Jews in Vienna through a variety of primary sources related to the Judenplatz, the square which is today the city’s premier site of Jewish memory, and Leopoldstadt, the district that encompasses Vienna’s most densely populated Jewish residential area. Memoirs, newspaper articles, caricatures, and maps written by both Jews and non-Jews reveal how the significance of these two areas changed over time, as they became deeply intertwined with the self-perceptions of both Jews and non-Jews. Analyzing how the Judenplatz and Leopoldstadt engaged Jewish difference over time helps us understand how the presence or absence of Jews remained a persistent dialectic in determining the meaning of place in Vienna.
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Widrich, Mechtild. "The Willed and the Unwilled Monument." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 72, no. 3 (September 1, 2013): 382–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2013.72.3.382.

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The Willed and the Unwilled Monument: Judenplatz Vienna and Riegl’s Denkmalpflege takes a new approach to the competition for the Monument and Memorial for the Jewish Victims of the Nazi Regime in Austria. Noting the complication of the case by the discovery of medieval archaeological remains on Vienna’s Judenplatz, and the ambivalence of the jury in choosing a sculptural project that made no reference to these remains, Mechtild Widrich turns to a lucid source of thinking about memory and public building, Alois Riegl’s essay on the monument cult (Denkmalkultus) and the newspaper articles and government documents he produced on the same subject. Through Riegl’s distinction between “willed” and “unwilled” monuments, and the force the latter exert on the subjectivity of modern spectators, the choice and execution of Rachel Whiteread’s “Nameless Library” in Vienna becomes intelligible, as do wider trends in restoration and commemoration of the late 1980s and 1990s.
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KUTTENBERG, EVA. "Austria's Topography of Memory: Heldenplatz, Albertinaplatz, Judenplatz, and Beyond." German Quarterly 80, no. 4 (May 19, 2008): 468–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1756-1183.2007.tb00086.x.

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Classen, Albrecht. "Unser Mittelalter: Die erste jüdische Gemeinde in Wien. Hrsg. von Astrid Peterle, Adina Seeger, Dornagoj Akrap und Danielle Spera. Wien: Jüdisches Museum Wien, 2021, 190 S., zahlreiche farbige Abb. Der gleiche Band auch noch in englischer Ausführung." Mediaevistik 34, no. 1 (January 1, 2021): 365–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/med.2021.01.62.

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Dieser Katalog begleitet eine permanente Ausstellung über die jüdische Gemeinde in Wien (Judenplatz), wo in den 90er Jahren intensive Ausgrabungen der ehemaligen Synagoge durchgeführt und wo dann darauf ein Mahnmal, entworfen von Rachel Whiteread, errichtet wurde. Heute gehören auch die Kellerräume des sogenannten Misrachi-Hauses zu dem Ausstellungskomplex. Eröffnet wurde das Mahnmal am 25. Oktober 2000, hier aber liegt nun ein Katalog für die ständige Ausstellung vor, der sich primär an die allgemeine Öffentlichkeit richtet, zugleich aber von wissenschaftlichen Fachkräften verfasst wurde.
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Hoffmann, Birgitta. "Die römischen Kasernen im Legionslager Vindobona: die Ausgrabungen am Judenplatz in Wien in den Jahren 1995–1998. By M. Mosser Monografien der Stadtarchäologie Wien, Bd. 5. Museen der Stadt Wien, Wien, 2010. 2 vols: pp. 1016 and 528, illus (some colour) + 8 colour folding plans. Price: €138.00. isbn 978 3 85161 023 9." Britannia 44 (June 28, 2013): 418–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068113x13000330.

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Ubertowska, Aleksandra. "Rzeźba w polu historii i nostalgii. Holocaust Mahnmal Rachel Whiteread." Widok. Teorie i Praktyki Kultury Wizualnej, no. 3 (2013). http://dx.doi.org/10.36854/widok/2013.3.1276.

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Artykuł jest próbą wielostronnej interpretacji pomnika ku czci wiedeńskich Żydów autorstwa brytyjskiej artystki Rachel Whiteread. Ten minimalistyczny monument, usytuowany w centralnej części Wiednia, przy Judenplatz (na terenie średniowiecznej dzielnicy żydowskiej) przedstawia 'odlew biblioteki', negatyw przestrzeni, nawiązującej do symboliki Zydów jako narodu Księgi. Autorka analizuje semantykę tej rzeźby-monumentu w odniesieniu do kilku pól problemowych: twórczości samej Whiteread, teorii rzeźby Rosalind Krauss i feministycznej historii sztuki.
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Carley, Rachel. "Silent Witness:." IDEA JOURNAL, July 17, 2010, 24–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.37113/ideaj.v0i0.121.

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Silent Witness examines the British sculptor Rachel Whiteread’s Nameless Library, (1996-2000), a holocaust memorial in Judenplatz Square, Vienna. For her project, the sculptor designed an inverted library in concrete, the proportions being derived from those found in a room surrounding the square. While the majority of critics refer to this memorial as an ‘inside out’ library, this paper argues that Whiteread’s design is not so easily understood. It will identify the ways in which her design complicates relationships between sculpture and architecture, container and contained, private and public, interior and façade, as well as domestic and civic scales. The work is placed within a ‘counter monumental’ tradition of memorialisation, as articulated by James E. Young, which demonstrates a radical re-making of memorial sculpture after the Holocaust. It is argued that this site-specific memorial, partially cloned from the urban context in which it is placed, commemorates a loss that is beyond words. Nameless Library utilises architectural operations and details to evoke a disquieting atmosphere in urban space, borrowing from the local to inculcate neighbouring structures as silent witnesses to past atrocities. The memorial is compared to the casemate fortifications on the Atlantic wall; the defensible spaces of bunkers, described by Paul Virilio in his book bunker Archaeology as ‘survival machines’. It is argued that Whiteread’s careful detailing of Nameless Library is designed to keep memory alive. Under Whiteread’s direction, The typological form of the bunker is transformed into a structure of both physical and psychic defense. The memorial has been specifically designed to resist attack by vandals and also functions as a defence against entropy, taking into itself and holding onto lost loved ones, preserving their memory.
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Books on the topic "Judenplatz"

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Gerhard, Milchram, ed. Judenplatz: Place of rememberence. Wien: Pichler Verlag, 2000.

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Winklbauer, Andrea. Zenita Komad: Spirituality is not shopping ; eine Ausstellung des Jüdischen Museums Wien ; Museum Judenplatz, 9. November 2011 bis 4. März 2012. Wien: Jüdisches Museum, 2011.

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3

Judenplatz Ort Der Erinnerung. Museum Judenplatz, 2000.

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4

Simon, Wiesenthal, ed. Projekt--Judenplatz Wien: Zur Konstruktion von Erinnerung. Wien: Zsolnay, 2000.

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5

Gerhard, Milchram, and Jüdisches Museum der Stadt Wien., eds. Museum Judenplatz for medieval Jewish life in Vienna. Wien: Pichler Verlag, 2000.

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Lucas, Gehrmann, Greber Marianne, and Kunsthalle Wien, eds. Judenplatz Wien 1996: Wettbewerb, Mahnmal und Gedenkstätte für die jüdischen Opfer des Naziregimes in Österreich 1938-1945 = competition, monument, and memorial site dedicated to the Jewish victims of the Nazi regime in Austria, 1938-1945. Wien: Folio, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Judenplatz"

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Langer, Gerhard. "Die »neue« Tafel am Judenplatz." In Science Tracing: Spuren und Zeichen im öffentlichen Raum, 43–52. Wien: Böhlau Verlag, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7767/9783205213932.43.

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"BOOK I, 1851-1853. Old Colony Teacher and Judenplan Settler." In A Mennonite in Russia, 75–130. University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442667723-004.

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"BOOK II, 1860-1866. Family and Village Life on the Judenplan." In A Mennonite in Russia, 131–222. University of Toronto Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442667723-005.

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