Privacy, literacy, and gender in early modern Jewish letters from Prague (1619)

Journal article


Diemling, M. 2023. Privacy, literacy, and gender in early modern Jewish letters from Prague (1619). Studia Judaica. 26 (2), pp. 401-433. https://doi.org/10.4467/24500100stj.23.017.18943
AuthorsDiemling, M.
AbstractHow private were Jewish letters in the early modern period? This article discusses Jewish epistolary culture and notions of privacy by examining an extraordinary cache of Jewish letters that were mostly written on a single day— 22 November 1619—in a single city, Prague, and sent to a single destination, Vienna. The letters never arrived and ended up in the archives where they were preserved for posterity. These letters allow us a glimpse into the lives of ordinary Jews in politically tumultuous times in which privacy and confidentiality could never be taken for granted. This article pays particular attention to gendered communication and privacy. It has been argued that in epistolary culture women are afforded a voice and speak for themselves. The evidence suggests that collaborative forms of writing that involved more than one writer were still common in early seventeenth-century Jewish correspondence, indicating zones of “privileged confidentiality” within larger family networks.
KeywordsJewish letters; Epistolary culture; Privacy; Gender; Literacy
Year2023
JournalStudia Judaica
Journal citation26 (2), pp. 401-433
PublisherUniwersytet Jagiellonski - Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego
ISSN2450-0100
1506-9729
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.4467/24500100stj.23.017.18943
Official URLhttps://www.ejournals.eu/SJ/2023/Numer-2-52/art/25203/
Publication dates
Online14 Dec 2023
Publication process dates
Deposited15 Nov 2023
Accepted25 Aug 2023
Accepted author manuscript
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Restricted
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Open
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