In seventeenth-century literature on the Grand Tour, the ghetto of Venice appears as a place of cross-cultural exchange and misunderstanding, a contact zone that stimulates interrogation and translation, comparison and projection, prejudice and discovery. The ghetto goes into eclipse in the English letters of the Enlightenment, to re-emerge in a number of Victorian texts. The essays of this forum show how the renewed interest in the Italian Ghettoes served two late Victorian writers, Israel Zangwill and Amy Levy, to reflect on their own modern British and Jewish identity
The city of Venice, established well over a millennium ago, represents one of the most unique histor...
[eng] While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy's article 'The Ghett...
With this English edition of Surviving the Ghetto, Serena Di Nepi traces the troubled and compelling...
In seventeenth-century literature on the Grand Tour, the ghetto of Venice appears as a place of cros...
In seventeenth-century literature on the Grand Tour, the ghetto of Venice appears as a place of cros...
Description and analysis of the rise of the ghetto in Venice and the cultural creativity of Jews in ...
The Venice Ghetto was founded in 1516 by the Venetian government as a segregated area of the city in...
In an 1886 piece of travel journalism written for the London-based periodical The Jewish Chronicle, ...
All the world ghettos derive their name from the Ghetto of Venice, which after its establishment in ...
Venice was the first city, in the early modern period, to establish a ghetto for the Jews. This arti...
March 29th 2016 saw the commemoration of the 500th anniversary of the foundation of the world\u2019s...
The five hundredth anniversary of the Venice ghetto (1516) offers an opportunity to resume the discu...
The article proposes a new reading of the word ghetto with regard to the dense historical past of th...
In this volume we look at a broad set of issues from the perspective of aphenomenon that began in th...
Entering the first ‘ghetto’ in the world, in Venice, Alan Macfarlane describes the origins of the gh...
The city of Venice, established well over a millennium ago, represents one of the most unique histor...
[eng] While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy's article 'The Ghett...
With this English edition of Surviving the Ghetto, Serena Di Nepi traces the troubled and compelling...
In seventeenth-century literature on the Grand Tour, the ghetto of Venice appears as a place of cros...
In seventeenth-century literature on the Grand Tour, the ghetto of Venice appears as a place of cros...
Description and analysis of the rise of the ghetto in Venice and the cultural creativity of Jews in ...
The Venice Ghetto was founded in 1516 by the Venetian government as a segregated area of the city in...
In an 1886 piece of travel journalism written for the London-based periodical The Jewish Chronicle, ...
All the world ghettos derive their name from the Ghetto of Venice, which after its establishment in ...
Venice was the first city, in the early modern period, to establish a ghetto for the Jews. This arti...
March 29th 2016 saw the commemoration of the 500th anniversary of the foundation of the world\u2019s...
The five hundredth anniversary of the Venice ghetto (1516) offers an opportunity to resume the discu...
The article proposes a new reading of the word ghetto with regard to the dense historical past of th...
In this volume we look at a broad set of issues from the perspective of aphenomenon that began in th...
Entering the first ‘ghetto’ in the world, in Venice, Alan Macfarlane describes the origins of the gh...
The city of Venice, established well over a millennium ago, represents one of the most unique histor...
[eng] While most scholars specialized in Amy Levy appear to agree that Amy Levy's article 'The Ghett...
With this English edition of Surviving the Ghetto, Serena Di Nepi traces the troubled and compelling...