This thesis explores how an understanding of the Haggadah—the ritual Passover script commemorating the Israelites’ Exodus from Egypt—illuminates otherwise hidden facets of Charlotte Salomon’s Leben? oder Theater? (Life? or Theatre?). In the epigraph to her work, Salomon writes that in 1941 she receded from all people and from the war raging on around her to paint and in doing so, to find “what I had to find: namely myself: a name for me.” This hidden exploration of the self resulted in thousands of semiautobiographical gouaches that she would later organize into her magnum opus, a silent opera titled Life? or Theatre?. A feat beyond comparison, scholars have long debated how we can categorize this play and in recent years, have asked what r...
This dissertation treats dramatic representations of biblical women by women that have emerged in th...
The aim of the article is to examine the figure of an artist in the novel Charlotte by David Foenkin...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...
This chapter discusses Charlotte Salomon’s Life? or Theatre?, a sequence of 784 paintings created be...
In exile on the Côte d’Azur Charlotte Salomon (Berlin 1917-Auschwitz 1943) painted Leben?oder Theate...
This conversation with Griselda Pollock, Professor of the Social and Critical Histories of Art in th...
It took me just one month in the Salaman archives of Cambridge University Library to accumulate hund...
This thesis examines representations of Jewish women on the British stage from 1945 to the present. ...
Salome is the myth of the Oriental princess who dances for her stepfather, Herod the tetrark at his ...
This paper is based upon university lectures I gave in 1998 as part of a joint series on Women\u27s ...
This thesis considers representations of the biblical dancer Salome in the context of the broader ch...
This conversation with Griselda Pollock, Professor of the Social and Critical Histories of Ar...
Through an analysis of literary texts and personal correspondence from 1800-1850 in Germany, England...
This work consists of a portfolio of creative writing in the form of a collection of short stories, ...
This paper proposes a conversation between Charlotte Salomon (1917–43) and Edvard Munch that is prem...
This dissertation treats dramatic representations of biblical women by women that have emerged in th...
The aim of the article is to examine the figure of an artist in the novel Charlotte by David Foenkin...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...
This chapter discusses Charlotte Salomon’s Life? or Theatre?, a sequence of 784 paintings created be...
In exile on the Côte d’Azur Charlotte Salomon (Berlin 1917-Auschwitz 1943) painted Leben?oder Theate...
This conversation with Griselda Pollock, Professor of the Social and Critical Histories of Art in th...
It took me just one month in the Salaman archives of Cambridge University Library to accumulate hund...
This thesis examines representations of Jewish women on the British stage from 1945 to the present. ...
Salome is the myth of the Oriental princess who dances for her stepfather, Herod the tetrark at his ...
This paper is based upon university lectures I gave in 1998 as part of a joint series on Women\u27s ...
This thesis considers representations of the biblical dancer Salome in the context of the broader ch...
This conversation with Griselda Pollock, Professor of the Social and Critical Histories of Ar...
Through an analysis of literary texts and personal correspondence from 1800-1850 in Germany, England...
This work consists of a portfolio of creative writing in the form of a collection of short stories, ...
This paper proposes a conversation between Charlotte Salomon (1917–43) and Edvard Munch that is prem...
This dissertation treats dramatic representations of biblical women by women that have emerged in th...
The aim of the article is to examine the figure of an artist in the novel Charlotte by David Foenkin...
This dissertation examines the ways in which contemporary Jewish American authors rewrite traditiona...