- The product "FUN WRITE AND COLOUR 1-10" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “FUN WRITE AND COLOUR 1-10” to your wishlist
- The product "CREATIVITY ART KG1-KG2" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “CREATIVITY ART KG1-KG2” to your wishlist
- “Vneeds Postal Colors” already exists in your wishlist
- The product "FUN CREATIVE ARTS KG1 -KG2" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “FUN CREATIVE ARTS KG1 -KG2” to your wishlist
- The product "BEST BRAIN JHS FRENCH (Q&A) WITH FON APP" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “BEST BRAIN JHS FRENCH (Q&A) WITH FON APP” to your wishlist
- The product "KWADWOAN MATHS BASIC 7- 8" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “KWADWOAN MATHS BASIC 7- 8” to your wishlist
- The product "VICTORY HISTORY BOOK 1- 3" has been removed from your wishlist because it can no longer be purchased.
- Failed to add “VICTORY HISTORY BOOK 1- 3” to your wishlist
A Danish Jew in West Africa: Wulff Joseph Wulff Biography And Letters (1836-1842)
₵65.00
Wulff’s life history is of considerable interest in itself. In her biographical essay (Part I) Selena Axelrod Winsnes portrays him as a ‘marginal man’: being a Jew in Denmark at the beginning of the 19th century was to some extent an uphill struggle for those who sought public recognition, and Wulff did not escape discrimination in his administrative career at Christiansborg either, although special circumstances allowed him to hold important positions, and yet, only for the short term.
Paradoxically, on his arrival to the Gold Coast Wulff — as a Jew — was placed in a middle position in the racial hierarchy dominating the mind-set of his superiors in Copenhagen — between Africans and Europeans. In many respects he shared the fate of Euro-Africans, straddling two worlds and being ‘sealed off’ from the top echelons of the European establishments on the Coast.
This book comprises two parts. The first is a biographical presentation of Wulff Joseph Wulff , a Danish Jew. It is an essay concerning the last six years of his life, spent on the Gold Coast of West Africa, based on letters he wrote to his family in Denmark. Those letters were published in 1917 as Da Guinea var Dansk [When Guinea was Danish], by Carl Behrens, a member of his family in Denmark. The second part of the book is an edited translation of the letters from Danish into English.












