In this Issue
Jewish Social Studies recognizes the increasingly fluid methodological and disciplinary boundaries within the humanities and is particularly interested both in exploring different approaches to Jewish history and in critical inquiry into the concepts and theoretical stances that underpin its problematics. It publishes specific case studies, engages in theoretical discussion, and advances the understanding of Jewish life as well as the multifaceted narratives that constitute its historiography.
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Indiana University Pressviewing issue
Volume 10, Number 3, Spring/Summer 2004 (New Series)Table of Contents

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View The Budapest Flaneur: Urban Modernity, Popular Culture, and the "Jewish Question" in Fin-de-Siecle Hungary
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View Good Maskilim and Bad Assimilationists, or Toward a New Historiography of the Haskalah in Poland
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ISSN | 1527-2028 |
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Print ISSN | 0021-6704 |
Launched on MUSE | 2004-11-09 |
Open Access | No |