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Introduction | 7
also very popular among the poor of Vienna on account of his charitable do-
nations.36 His magical talents left a strong impression on the population, and
through various media he has remained in the collective memory of the Viennese
population. A portrait of him currently hangs in the Austrian Museum in the
Belvedere, and one of his friends, Johann Strauss, dedicated a polka to him in
1851, which he fi rst introduced at a performance in the dance hall Sperl.37
Th
is short overview allows us to see that Katz’s job as escamoteur was not un-
usual for Jews. Th
e widespread idea that they were particularly suited to being
magicians on account of their knowledge of Kab balah increased their popular
attraction and proved to be an advantage over non-Jewish colleagues. One of the
reasons for this stereotype is that non-Jewish magicians were an unknown quan-
tity to a larger audience prior to 1790.38
Overview of the Chapters
A review of the available scholarly literature on the history of the Jews of Vienna
makes it clear that Jewish magicians and toad swallowers have thus far received
scant scholarly attention. Th
ey have been largely ignored and continue to be
ignored. Th
ese omissions have not led to a fundamentally incorrect portrayal of
Viennese Jewry, but rather to an incomplete one—which has ultimately fueled a
distorted idea about them and their history. Th
at is why the Jewish population in
the Danube metropolis is still almost exclusively associated with the bourgeoisie
or the process of becoming “bourgeois” (Verbürgerlichung).39 Th e fact that Jews
were also generally active in popular culture and sometimes paid little attention
to the standards of the much-lauded bourgeoisie has been overlooked. In chap-
ter 1, I demonstrate with a series of concrete examples a diff
erent path that some
Jews chose to take.
In this study, I pose a number of questions and endeavor to answer them. My
primary thesis is that Jews played a substantial role in the shaping of Viennese
popular culture. Th
ough my argument has until recently been to some degree
contentious, I am able to substantiate it using a wide variety of sources.
In chapter 1 in particular, I pose a central question, namely why so few schol-
ars have researched and written about Jews in Viennese popular culture around
1900. What has prevented historical scholarship from intensive explorations of
the subject? Why have historians tended to engage with the topic of Jews and
“high” culture instead of also considering popular culture? One possible reason
for this scholarly neglect may be linked to the so-called invisibility of Jewish
artists. Th
ey often performed using a nom de plume and demonstrated no other
(obvious) Jewish characteristics. In instances when their contemporaries, and
sometimes even their fellow performers, did not recognize them as Jews, it can
be even more diffi
cult for historians in retrospect to identify certain Volkssänger
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Entangled Entertainers
Jews and Popular Culture in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- Titel
- Entangled Entertainers
- Untertitel
- Jews and Popular Culture in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna
- Autor
- Klaus Hödl
- Verlag
- Berghahn Books
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-78920-031-7
- Abmessungen
- 14.86 x 23.2 cm
- Seiten
- 196
- Kategorien
- Geschichte Vor 1918
- International
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Introduction 1
- 1. Jews in Viennese Popular Culture around 1900 as Research Topic 13
- 2. Jewish Volkssänger and Musical Performers in Vienna around 1900 44
- 3. Jewishness and the Viennese Volkssänger 78
- 4. Jewish Spaces of Retreat at the Turn of the Twentieth Century 121
- 5. From Difference to Similarity 148
- Conclusion 163
- Bibliography 166
- Index 179