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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter November 24, 2021

Simon Szántó, Nineteenth Century Viennese Writer and Educator: A Study on Integration, Particularism, and the Ideal of Bildung

  • Sara Olga Melinda Yanovsky EMAIL logo
From the journal Naharaim

Abstract

Simon Szántó is known as one of the founders of the Jewish press in Vienna, the editor and main author of the Jewish periodical Die Neuzeit, and an influential educator during the high point of Austrian liberalism between the 1860s and the early 1880s. His enormously rich literary legacy covers issues such as the integration of Jews into the Austrian-Hungarian society, religious reform, gender roles, and particularly education. Szántó’s writings offer a unique opportunity to look at the Viennese liberal period of the second half of the nineteenth century and its challenges through the eyes of a mostly overlooked, but highly significant and influential actor of the time. This article will first introduce Simon Szántó’s cultural and educational background that impacted his ideals and his activities, and go on to discuss one of his main concerns, namely Jewish education. Religious education, confessional schooling, and Jewish upbringing at home bore the burden of responsibility for shaping Austrian Jewish women and men. These Jews were to be integrated in an Austrian culture, while at the same time taught to retain a strong Jewish particularity. Szántó aimed to unite this dichotomous reality through the realization of his ideals of Jewish Bildung.


Corresponding author: Sara Olga Melinda Yanovsky, World Union of Jewish Studies, Rabin World Center of Jewish Studies, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mt Scopus, Jerusalem, 9190501, Israel, E-mail:

Published Online: 2021-11-24
Published in Print: 2021-12-20

© 2021 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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