Copyright

Franklin Felsenstein

Published On

2024-03-25

Page Range

pp. 417–458

Language

  • English

Print Length

42 pages

Twenty-Nine

“Today, For The First Time In My Life, I Wished I Were A Man!”

  • Frank Felsenstein (author)
During their time in France, Vera becomes pregnant. The correspondence features some brief disagreements between the couple regarding Vera’s increased workload when she is informed she will be put in charge of the new store, and how this might affect her pregnancy. The welfare department then ruled that the promotion would be too demanding for an expectant mother, Vera is disappointed by the news. The situation for Jews in Germany continues to decline, and Vera receives much correspondence requesting her assistance in escaping the country.

Contributors

Frank Felsenstein

(author)
Reed D. Voran Honors Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emeritus at Ball State University

Franklin Felsenstein (aka Frank Felsenstein) is the only son of Maurice (“Mope”) and Vera Felsenstein. He is the Reed D. Voran Honors Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emeritus at Ball State University in Indiana. Before that, he was Reader in Eighteenth-Century Studies at the University of Leeds in England. He has also held appointments at the University of Geneva in Switzerland, Vanderbilt University, Yeshiva College, and Drew University. His publications include Anti-Semitic Stereotypes: A Paradigm of Otherness in English Popular Culture (1995), English Trader, Indian Maid: Representing Gender, Race, and Slavery in the New World (1999), and (with James J. Connolly) What Middletown Read: Print Culture in an American Small City (2015). He has edited works by Tobias Smollett (Travels through France and Italy), Peter Aram (A Practical Treatise of Flowers), and John Thelwall (Incle and Yarico). He and his family moved to the United States in 1998. He and his wife now live in Chicago.