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Mark. H. Gelber (born 1951, Brooklyn, New York) is an American-Israeli scholar of comparative literature and German-Jewish literature and culture.
He received his B.A. magna cum laude and with high honors in Letters and German (Phi Beta Kappa, Wesleyan University). He also studied at the University of Bonn, the University of Grenoble, and Tel Aviv University. He was accepted for graduate studies as a Lewis Farmington Fellow in the Humanities and Social Sciences at Yale University and he received his M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. from Yale University.
In 1980 he accepted an appointment as post-doctoral lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, in the Department of Foreign Literatures and Linguistics. Except for guest professorships and research fellowships abroad, he has been affiliated there since that time.
Gelber won Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowships in 1991–92, 2003–04, and 2018–19 (Univ. Tübingen, Freie Universität, Berlin, Europa Univ. Viadrina, Frankfurt/Oder, Selma Stern Zentrum für Jüdische Studien, Berlin), in addition to several DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) research stipends. He has been a guest professor at the University of Pennsylvania, a David Herzog visiting professor at the University of Graz, Austrian guest professor at the University of Maribor, Blaustein visiting professor at Yale University in Judaic Studies, honorary research fellow at the University of Auckland, guest professor of German literature at the Universiteit Antwerpen, DAAD-Gastprofessor at the RWTH Aachen, Taub Center guest professor at New York University, guest professor at Renmin University, Beijing, and guest professor at Sun Yat-sen University (Guangzhou). He was invited to be a member of the International Advisory Board of the "Yearbook of the Leo Baeck Institute" (London) and appointed to the wissenschaftliche Beirat of "Literaturstrasse," the Chinese-German Yearbook for Language, Literature and Cultural Studies.
From 2008-2018 Gelber directed the Research Center for Austrian and German Studies at Ben-Gurion University. [1] He was a member of the executive board of the Rabb Center for Holocaust Studies from its founding at BGU until his retirement. [2] He was elected twice as Chair of the Department of Foreign Literatures and Linguistics and was appointed Director of the Overseas Student Programs and the Center for International Student Programs at BGU (1996–2004). He established and directed the Internationale Sommeruniversität für Hebräisch, Jüdische Studien und Israelwissenschaften in Beer Sheva (1998–2004, 2009), which has hosted hundreds or more German-speaking students from a dozen countries since its inception. In November 2008 he was appointed Dean of International Academic Affairs at Ben-Gurion University. [3] In 2009 he was elected to the executive board of the Leo Baeck Institute, Jerusalem, where he served from 2009–2017. [4]
In 2001 Gelber was elected to life membership in the Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung (Darmstadt). [5] From 2007-2014 he was the Israeli academic representative on the Post-doctoral Fellowship Committee for the Minerva Foundation of the Max Planck Gesellschaft (München) with primary responsibility for the faculties of the humanities, social sciences and law. [6] He regularly reviews research projects for the Israel Science Foundation, the German-Israel Fund and the Austrian Science Foundation. He was appointed twice by Israeli Ministers of Education to be a judge for the Israel Prize in World Literature and in Hebrew and Jewish Literatures.
Gelber is on the International Scientific Board of the Österreichische Exilbibliothek (Vienna) and the executive board of the Institute for Jewish Studies in Antwerp. He is a member of the editorial board of the conditio judaica book series on German-Jewish Literature and Culture, first published at Niemeyer Verlag (Tübingen) and now published by Verlag Walter de Gruyter (Berlin), and is a member of the editorial board of the series "Perspectives on Jewish Texts and Contexts," also published by de Gruyter. He is on the international editorial board of "transversal," published by the Center of Jewish Studies, University of Graz, as well as the international editorial board of Chilufim, published by the Center for Jewish Cultural History at the University of Salzburg. He was elected to the academic committee of the Internationale Stefan Zweig Gesellschaft (Salzburg) and also elected to the executuve board of the Association for European Jewish Literature Studies (EJLS).
A Festschrift in honor of Gelber's retirement ("Emeritierung") was presented in 2018: Wegweiser und Grenzgänger: Studien zur deutsch-jüdischen Kultur- und Literaturgeschichte. Eine Festschrift für Mark H. Gelber [Pathfinder on the Frontiers: Interdisciplinary Studies in German and German-Jewish Literary and Cultural History. Essays in Honor of Mark H. Gelber] (Böhlau Verlag). A symposium in honor of Gelber, entitled "Austrian/German-Jewish Studies and Their Future," was held at Ben-Gurion University in October, 2018. Also the Republic of Austria selected Mark Gelber to receive the Honorary Medal for Science and Art, First Class (Österreichisches Ehrenkreuz für Wissenschaft und Kunst, 1. Klasse).
Gelber has published 20 single-authored, edited, and co-edited books and some 100 scholarly essays (articles, book chapters) and an additional 75 shorter pieces (book reviews, encyclopedia articles, museum catalogue contributions, academic bulletin articles, academic eulogies, scholarly introductions). He is known for his wide range of subjects spanning the fields of literature, history, religion, and cultural studies. Also, he has given more than 260 lectures at academic conferences and seminars internationally. His topics include the following authors: Franz Kafka, Max Brod, Stefan Zweig, Joseph Roth, Elias Canetti, Martin Buber, Theodor Herzl, Nathan Birnbaum, Else Lasker-Schüler, Richard Beer-Hofmann, Max Nordau, E.M. Lilien, Thomas Mann, Gustav Freytag, Georg Hermann, Manfred Sturmann, Julius Bab, Nelly Sachs, Glückel von Hameln, Heinrich Heine, Ludwig Börne, Karl Emil Franzos, Charles Dickens, T.S. Eliot, Erica Jong, Elie Wiesel, Jakov Lind, Ruth Klüger, Rose Ausländer, and others. [7]
M.A. and doctoral students have written theses under his guidance on a wide range of topics, including: “The Tarot in Eliot, Yeats, and Kafka,” [8] “Kafka’s Substitute Mothers,” “Franz Kafka’s Mystical Modalities,” [9] “Martin Buber’s Theory of Art Education,” "In Defense of Fiction: Representations of Trauma in Shoah Literature," “Mapping Zionism: East and West in Early Zionist Thought,” “Jacques Derrida’s Double Torah,” “Academic Autobiography, Freud and the Shoa: Peter Gay and Sara Kofman,”, "Konzepte der Authentizität im frühen deutschen zionistischen Diskurs von 1862 bis ins 20. Jahrhundert", "Understanding and Judgement in 'The Grey Zone' in Primo Levi's Ethical Thought," and "Kafka's The Trial: A Reevaluation of Morality and a Critique of Jurisprudence." Gelber has functioned as host and mentor to numerous post-doctoral fellows sponsored by the Kreitman School at BGU, the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and the Minerva Foundation. His post-doctoral researchers have included: Eitan Bar-Yosef, Amos Morris-Reich, Na’ama Rokem, Bettina von Jagow, Stefan Vogt and others. [10]
At the first international conference concerning literary anti-Semitism (Bielefeld, 2007) Gelber was called a pioneer in the field. It was the topic of his doctoral dissertation, “Aspects of Literary Anti-Semitism: Dickens and Freytag” (Yale: 1980). His foundational scholarly article, "What is Literary Anti-Semitism?" (1985) appeared in Jewish Social Studies (then published by Columbia University in New York). [11] According to Gelber: "…any useful definition of literary anti-Semitism must proceed from literature itself, that is, from texts... literary anti-Semitism may be defined as the potential or capacity of a text to encourage or positively evaluate anti-Semitic attitudes or behaviors, in accordance, generally, with the delineation of such attitudes and behaviors by social scientists and historians.
Just as social scientists are careful to locate and identify anti-Semitism according to indices of attitudes and behaviors, literary scholars must attempt to understand precisely how anti-Semitic attitudes manifest themselves in literature and how 'anti-Semitically charged elements' function and interact in texts." [12] His other articles on literary (and filmic) anti-Semitism have focused on Charles Dickens, Gustav Freytag, Julius Langbehn, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, Thomas Mann, T.S. Eliot, Paul de Man, and Mel Gibson. [13] In 2012 he organized a study day in Israel on the possible literary anti-Semitism and public controversy concerning Günter Grass's "Was gesagt werden muss."
Mark H. Gelber, "Literarischer Antisemitismus," in Hans Otto Horch (Ed.), "Handbuch der deutsch-jüdischen Literatur" (Oldenbourg: De Gruyter 2016), 37-44.
Gelber's book on Cultural Zionism and German Literature and Culture, entitled Melancholy Pride: Nation, Race, and Gender in the German Literature of Cultural Zionism (2000) illuminated the diverse and complicated reciprocal relationships between Jewish national expression and German literature and culture at the end of the 19th century. Numerous scholarly reviewers, including Ritchie Robertson (Oxford), Gerhard Kurz (Giessen) and Armin A. Wallas (Klagenfurt) were unanimous in their high praise this study. [14] Key figures such as Martin Buber, Nathan Birnbaum, E.M. Lilien, Lesser Ury, Berthold Feiwel, Adolph Donath, Richard Beer-Hofmann, Karl Wolfskehl, Else Lasker-Schüler, Börries Freiherr von Münchhausen and many others appear in this particular cultural and literary space. [15]
Gelber is recognized internationally as an expert on the writings and career of Franz Kafka, especially regarding his complex relationship to Zionism. [16] He organized an international conference in 1999, entitled: “’Ich bin Ende oder Anfang’: Kafka, Zionism and Beyond.” The papers delivered at this conference were edited by him and published in 2004 (Niemeyer Verlag). He contributed an essay on Zionist interpretations of Kafka to the Kafka Handbuch (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2008). Gelber served as an expert consultant to the National Library of Israel in the protracted legal case concerning the will and literary estate of Max Brod, which includes numerous Kafka manuscripts.
He was invited by various institutes and universities, such as Stanford University, New York University, [17] Wesleyan University, [18] the University of California, Davis, the University of Antwerp, RWTH Aachen, the Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam, New School for Social Research in New York], [19] and others, to deliver lectures or to engage in dialogue or debate regarding Kafka and his work, his relationship to Zionism, and the trial in Israel. In 2015, Gelber co-organized an international conference at Ben-Gurion University in Beer Sheva entitled "Kafka after Kafka." [20] Gelber was invited by the National Library of Israel to be a member of the academic committee for the Kafka Year in 2024. Also, he co-organized a Kafka conference, entitled "Kafka lives in Israel, A Century after his Death," held at the Writer's House in Beer Sheva. His own lecture at this conference, given in Hebrew, was entitled: "Kafka lives in Israel and American-Jewish Literature: Nicole Krauss's Forest Dark." He is also the co-organizer of an international Kafka Conference, to be held at the Institute of Jewish Studies in Antwerp. His lecture in Antwerp is entitled: Franz Kafka as a Jewish Reader and Jewish Readings of his Work."
Gelber's articles and books on Franz Kafka include:
Gelber is the author of numerous publications on the Austrian-Jewish writer Stefan Zweig, which have inaugurated a new way of reading Zweig, particularly within various Jewish and Zionist contexts. He has been called "one of the world's most eminent authorities on the works of the early 20th century Jewish-Austrian author Stefan Zweig" [21] and the "Israeli Zweig expert". [22] He organized the first Stefan Zweig conference held in Israel in 1981, and he was invited by the city of Salzburg to organize the first major international Stefan Zweig Congress (1992). He organized two more international Zweig conferences (Jerusalem-Beer Sheva, Berlin); he co-edited and published the papers from both of these conferences. In 2011, he gave the first biannual Stefan Zweig lecture at the State University of New York at Fredonia, the location of a major Stefan Zweig archive. Gelber has lectured on Zweig in Israel, Europe, the U.S. and Canada, in Brazil, China, New Zealand and elsewhere. In 2012, he delivered opening plenary lectures at two Zweig conferences: the University of London and Renmin University in Beijing. Gelber's monograph, "Stefan Zweig, Judentum und Zionismus", was published by Studien Verlag (Innsbruck: 2014).
Gelber co-edited a volume of essays (with Birger Vanwesenbeeck), Stefan Zweig and World Literature: 21st Century Perspectives (Camden House: 2014). and (with Zhang Yi, Renmin University) the essay collection: Aktualität und Beliebtheit – Neue Forschung und Rezeption von Stefan Zweig im internationalen Blickwinkel (2015). Gelber was the initiator and co-organizer of an international conference, "Stefan Zweig - ein jüdischer Schrifsteller aus Europa" which took place at the Stefan Zweig Centre in Salzburg in 2015. The papers delivered at this conference (co-edited by Gelber) were published in 2017 in the Stefan Zweig Centre's book series and entitled: "Stefan Zweig - Jüdische Relationen. Studien zu Werk und Biographie". His own essay in this volume argues for the understanding of a "Fourth Life" in the career of Stefan Zweig and includes an analysis from this perspective of Zweig's book on Brazil ("Brasilien. Ein Land der Zukunft") in relation to his autobiography, "Die Welt von Gestern."
In November 2016 Gelber lectured in Hebrew at a major event in memory of Zweig, organized by the National Library of Israel entitled: Stefan Zweig, the Future, and the Literary World between the World Wars. Also, Gelber contributed the entry on "Judentum und jüdische Identität" to the Stefan Zweig Handbuch (De Gruyter, 2018). Gelber has assumed a major role and is a member of the Public Council in the recently established Israeli Association of Friends of Stefan Zweig (2021). In 2022, Gelber lectured on "Stefan Zweig, Sigmund Freud und autobiographisches Schreiben" at the Freud Museum in Vienna.
Following in the footsteps of one of his mentors, Professor Solomon Liptzin, for whom he edited Identity and Ethos: A Festschrift for Sol Liptzin on the Occasion of His 85th Birthday, [23] Gelber has contributed numerous articles in the field of Yiddish-German literary relations. In this area he has published on Heinrich Heine and Yiddish; Stefan Zweig, Sholem Asch and Yiddish; Stefan Zweig, Yiddish and East European Literature and Culture; on Yiddish lexical items (and multilingualism) in the work of Stefan Zweig, Fanya Heller, and Ruth Klüger.
An essay on Rose Ausländer in Jewish Cultural Spaces (including Yiddish and German) of Early Twentieth-Century Eastern Europe (Bukowina), based on a lecture delivered in Wellington, New Zealand, was published in the memorial volume for Petra Ernst in 2020. [24] In his lecture at the International Kafka Conference held in Prague in 2016, "Kafka and Interculturality," Gelber spoke about the literary relationship between one of the major figures in the modern Yiddish revival, Nathan Birnbaum, and Franz Kafka. In the framework of an intercultural investigation, it can be shown that there is much more to this relationship than merely a Yiddish-German (language) connection. See Mark H. Gelber,"Amerikanismus, Jiddisch, Judentum und Interkulturalität," in Steffen Höhne and Manfred Weinberg (Eds.),"Franz Kafka im interkulturellen Kontext" (Wien, Köln, Weimar: Böhlau 2019), 87-96.
Gelber has published extensively in the field of German-Jewish Literature and Culture, which he views as a “discipline in its own right.” [25] In a published essay based on a conference lecture he gave in Tel Aviv in 2004, and entitled “German-Jewish Literature and Culture and the Field of German-Jewish Studies,” he wrote: “This discipline may be discerned between the boundaries of Germanistik on one side and Jewish Studies on the other, although such fields as Exile Studies (and Diaspora Studies) and Holocaust Studies (and Memory Studies), which also emerged from and appear to be tangential to German and Jewish Studies respectively, also border on and derive synergistic intellectual energy from German-Jewish Studies.” [26]
Gelber organized a major international conference on "Thirty Years of German-Jewish Literary Cultural Studies", which took place in Beer Sheva and Jerusalem in 2010. Gelber is the author of numerous academic encyclopedia articles and essays about German-Jewish literature and culture, and German-Jewish writers, including: Max Brod, [27] Martin Buber, [28] Lion Feuchtwanger, Berthold Feiwel, Iwan Goll, Sammy Gronnemann, Georg Hirschfeld, Leo Kompert, Theodor Lessing, Jakov Lind, [29] Samuel Lublinski, Salomon Hermann Mosenthal, Chaim Noll, [30] Karl Wolfskehl, Arnold Zweig, and others. [31]
A selection of articles and books on the subject of German-Jewish Studies includes:
Stefan Zweig was an Austrian writer. At the height of his literary career, in the 1920s and 1930s, he was one of the most widely translated and popular writers in the world.
Arnold Zweig was a German Jewish writer, pacifist and socialist.
Max Brod was a Bohemian-born Israeli author, composer, and journalist.
Max Isidor Bodenheimer was a lawyer and one of the main figures in German Zionism. An associate of Theodor Herzl, he was the first president of the Zionist Federation of Germany and one of the founders of the Jewish National Fund. After his flight in 1933 from Nazi Germany, and a short sojourn in Holland, he settled in Palestine in 1935.
Matthias Küntzel, is a German political scientist and historian. He was an external research associate at the Vidal Sassoon Center for the Study of Antisemitism (SICSA) at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem from 2004 to 2015. Currently, he is a member of the German Council on Foreign Relations DGAP and of the advisory board of UANI.
Henryk Marcin Broder, self-designation Henryk Modest Broder, is a Polish-born German journalist, author, and television personality. He was born into a Jewish family in Katowice, Poland.
Karl Theodor Richard Lessing was a German Jewish philosopher.
Heinz Politzer was an internationally recognized academic and writer. As a young man he was forced to flee Nazism first to Palestine and then to the United States, where he taught German language and literature as a professor at the Bryn Mawr College, Oberlin College, and the University of California, Berkeley. He was a literary scholar, published poet, and prominent editor, particularly of Franz Kafka. As a close associate of Kafka's protégé, Max Brod, Politzer coedited with Brod the first complete collection of Kafka's works in eight volumes, published initially by the Schocken publishing house of Berlin during the early years of the Nazi dictatorship and subsequently by the successor firm Schocken Books in New York.
Paul Michael Lutzeler is a German-American scholar of German studies and comparative literature. He is the Rosa May Distinguished University Professor Emeritus in the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis.
Avraham Barkai was a German-born Israeli historian and researcher of antisemitism. He died at age 99 on 29 February 2020 in Lehavot HaBashan.
Vivian Liska, born in New York City, United States is a professor of German literature and director of the Institute of Jewish Studies at the University of Antwerp, Belgium. Since 2013 she is also distinguished visiting professor at Hebrew University, Jerusalem.
Hans Shmuel Beyth was a German banker and Zionist activist. Between 1935 and 1945 he was a close aide of Henrietta Szold managing the Youth Aliyah, and from 1945 until his death in 1947 he was the leader of the organization in Palestine. Beyth was killed in a shootout during the civil war in Mandatory Palestine.
Michael Brenner is a German historian who researches and publishes on the history of Jews and Israel. Brenner has authored eight books on Jewish history, which were translated into twelve languages and is the editor and co-editor of eighteen books. He holds teaching positions at both the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich and the American University.
Markus Fischer is a German author of multiple books, as well as a contributor to various volumes He is professor at the faculty of foreign languages and literatures at the University of Bucharest.
Zohar Shavit is an Israeli professor at Tel Aviv University’s School for Cultural Studies.
Jüdische Rundschau was a Jewish periodical that was published in Germany between 1902 and 1938. It was the biggest Jewish weekly publication in Germany, and was the origin of the Zionist Federation of Germany.
Deborah Judith Vietor-Engländer is a British literary scholar.
Werner Kraft was a German-Israeli literary scholar, writer and librarian.
Albert Katz, also known by the pen name Ish ha-Ruaḥ, was a Polish-born rabbi, writer, and journalist.
Liliane Weissberg is an American literary scholar and cultural historian specializing in German-Jewish studies and German and American literature. She is currently the Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor in Arts and Sciences and Professor of German and Comparative Literature at the University of Pennsylvania. She received, among others, a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Humboldt Research Award for her research on German-Jewish literature and culture and the Berlin Prize of the American Academy in Berlin, and holds an honorary degree from the University of Graz.