1,443 results on '"JEWISH nationalism"'
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2. Reflections on Jewish nationalism, militarism and ageing masculinity in Yoram Kaniuk's novel Scums.
- Author
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Gurevitch, Danielle
- Subjects
- *
MILITARISM , *SPECULATIVE fiction , *ZIONISM , *LIQUID modernity , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
This article offers a nuanced understanding of novelist Yoram Kaniuk's national ideology as a representative of a generation, as well as unveils personal, untreated trauma as reflected in his writing. By way of doing so, it employs two research approaches: a literary speculative fiction interpretation examined through a lens of alternative history, and a cultural sociology perspective based on the concepts of 'Imagined Communities' and 'Liquid Modernity'. On a broader level, his novel Scums portrays the deep disillusionment and disappointment experienced by veterans of Israel's founding generation, who felt abandoned by their successors and betrayed by their values. On a personal level, Kaniuk's writing reflects military flashbacks that significantly impacted his post-traumatic state of mind, which in turn influenced the way he perceived, described, and interpreted the historical fragments of his generation. Considering Kaniuk's discomfort in discussing issues that deeply concerned him, he found solace and liberation through the medium of writing, which enabled him to express his thoughts and emotions, shouting them onto the page, unburdening himself, and making sense of his experiences. Thus, by writing in an unapologetic and candid manner, Kaniuk navigated the complexities of his inner world and external challenges, embracing his own truth and carving out a place for himself to be heard. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. National education: the annual field trip as an instrument of national education in Israel's State education system, 2008–2020.
- Author
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Shamir, Royi and Cohen-Hattab, Kobi
- Subjects
- *
SCHOOL field trips , *EDUCATION , *ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The purpose of this article is to assess the way annual highschool field trips in Israel's State educational system is used to inculcate national narratives. Based on copious data, it shows that knowing and loving the Land of Israel (Eretz Israel) are significant motifs that recur with high intensity in all school field trip programmememes. Concurrently, however, in view of the high frequency of national motives in these trips, integrating the national aspect has apparently become a codeword for the 'right way' to plan out and carry out field trips. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Zionism and Jewish statehood as expressions of Jewish modernisation.
- Author
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Friesel, Evyatar
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *NATIONALISM , *SECULARIZATION , *HASKALAH - Abstract
The adaptation to modernity generated among the Jews different amalgamations between European and Jewish concepts and brought about diverse and often opposed ideological trends and movements. One was Zionism, built on a concoction between Jewish tenets such as Shivat-Zion (Return-to-Zion) and European nationalism and secularisation. The result, Jewish statehood, failed to eradicate or diminish the tensions between non-Jews and Jews with the old Jew-hatred now transferred to Israel. This article examines the ideological background of the Zionist idea and the interaction among its components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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5. 'And I overcame a Jew hater, somewhere in the mountains' three versions of a hike and a fight with an Arab robber.
- Author
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Carmi, Udi and Kidron, Anat
- Subjects
- *
ARAB-Israeli conflict , *PALESTINIAN history, 1917-1948 , *ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The need for a common memory creates a link between personal stories and the shared values of the nation's citizens. Flamm's story reflects an attempt to create such a link. In 1943, a group of hikers in the Galilee came upon an Arab who attempted to rob them at gunpoint. Joseph Flamm, the group's guide and an amateur wrestler, fought the Arab, subdued him and killed him. A different version of the story of this incident came up every few years. Joseph Flamm, the story's hero, played a major role in the attempt to paint the incident in nationalistic colours. His own involvement in publicizing and shaping the story enables us to examine the encounter between a personal attempt to enter the national collective memory and the political use that was made of the story. This article discusses the attempt to turn this criminal event into a national heroic event in the context of the Arab Israeli conflict. The later versions presented it as a tangible expression of national myths, among them scouting and knowledge of Israel's geography, physical heroism and defending the homeland. The last version of the story was published in the 1970s, a period that signalled a change in the Zionist ethos. The Israeli public no longer showed interest in heroic stories such as Flamm's. Therefore, despite attempts to revive the story and efforts to affix it in the collective memory, it eventually disappeared from the public eye. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. THE GATES OF THE GHETTO.
- Author
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Eichler, William
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism , *JEWISH identity , *NATIONAL self-determination , *EMANCIPATION of Jews - Abstract
The article discusses the emergence of Zionism, the Jewish nationalist movement, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It highlights the context of Jewish life in Europe, the impact of the French Revolution and Jewish emancipation, and the rise of nationalism as factors that influenced the development of Zionism. It also mentions the rise of nationalism in Europe presented a challenge, as Jews were often excluded from national identities which led to the emergence of Zionism.
- Published
- 2023
7. Benefitting from the ambiguity: the issue of the 'Turkishness' of the Jewish minority in the first decade of the Turkish Republic.
- Author
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Özçalık Dumanoğulları, Sevil
- Subjects
- *
JEWISH identity , *JEWISH nationalism , *ANTISEMITISM , *RACISM ,TREATY of Lausanne (1923) - Abstract
This article attempts to contextualize the situation of the Jewish community recognized as a minority group in the Treaty of Lausanne within a wider framework of Turkish nationalism during the first decade of the Republic. It will claim that the ruling elite of the Republic concurrently defined 'Turkishness' on inclusive and exclusive terms. While in theory, Turkish nationalism was a 'civic' nationalism defining 'Turkishness' based on citizenship, when it came to practice, all citizens of the Republic were not privy to this identity; some of them, especially Jews, were expected to prove their loyalty in order to become equal members of the nation. This article claims that the contradictory attitude of the ruling elite – keeping the definition of 'Turkishness' ambiguous – had the purpose of constructing a cohesive and homogenous national community. In line with this ambiguous definition of 'Turkishness', the ruling elite developed an ambivalent attitude towards non-Muslim minorities and their place in the nation and the Jews of Turkey were affected the most by this precarious attitude. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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8. Zionism and the Hebrew Bible: from religious holiness to national sanctity.
- Author
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Conforti, Yitzhak
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism , *JEWISH diaspora , *RELIGION & culture - Abstract
The Bible's central position in the Zionist movement is well-known. Most previous studies on this topic have focused on Israeli society following the establishment of the State of Israel. By contrast, this article focuses on the role of the Hebrew Bible in Jewish nationalism and early Zionist thought from the 1880s to 1948. This article examines the connection between Zionism and the Bible in the context of modern nationalism research from a cultural approach. The focus on the Bible gave Zionism the components it lacked: territory and language. Unlike other ancient Jewish texts in which national aspects were marginalized, the Bible set a model for the creation of a modern nation-state. To the Zionists, the Bible was a guide to forming the 'New Jew'. This article shows that examining the relationship between Zionism and the Bible enables better understanding of the pre-modern cultural foundations of the Jewish national movement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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9. Iraq and its Jewish minority: from the establishment of the state to the great Jewish immigration 1921-1951.
- Author
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Gat, Moshe
- Subjects
- *
IMMIGRANTS , *OTTOMAN Empire , *JEWISH identity , *JEWISH nationalism , *EQUAL rights , *JEWISH communities - Abstract
The transition from life under Ottoman rule to life under the Iraqi Kingdom established in 1921 marked a positive shift in the fortunes of the country's Jewish community. During the British mandate for Iraq (1921–32), the Jews enjoyed equal rights and were economically and socially integrated into Muslim society. However, with the end of the mandate and the acceptance of Iraq's independence, a process of restricting the Jews and physically harming them began, culminating in the pogrom (known as the Farhud) of June 1941. During the decade attending the Farhud, the Iraqi government linked the fate of the Jewish community to that of the Palestinian Arabs. The state pursued a policy of oppression and discrimination, which eventually led to the displacement of the country's Jewish community from a place it had called home for thousands of years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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10. The Jewish "East" and its Restricted Agencies * .
- Author
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Moreno, Aviad and Karkason, Tamir
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *AMERICAN Jews , *ISRAELI Jews , *STATE power , *POWER (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL sciences education , *ASHKENAZIM , *PATRONAGE - Abstract
"The Jewish 'East' and its Restricted Agencies" is an article that examines the historical relationship between Jews and Muslims in Israel and the MENA region. It challenges the simplistic portrayal of Israel as a Western oppressor and Islamic entities as oppressed Easterners, arguing that this oversimplifies the complex dynamics at play. The article also discusses the treatment of Mizrahi Jews in Israel and their integration into a predominantly European-oriented Zionist society. It emphasizes the need to reclaim Jewish agencies and challenges the perception of Israel as a white-Ashkenazi presence in the Middle East. The article calls for a more nuanced exploration of Jewish history in Islamic contexts to give voice to Mizrahi Jewish experiences. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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11. The Yiddish press and the making of South African Jewry in the British world: exclusion, libel, and Jewish nationalism, 1890-1914.
- Author
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Pimlott, William
- Subjects
YIDDISH newspapers ,PRESS ,SOUTH African Jews ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,ZIONISM ,RELIGIOUS right ,JEWISH nationalism ,HISTORIOGRAPHY - Abstract
The article narrates the history of the Yiddish press and its role in the development of South African Jewish community and its political institutions from 1890 to 1914. Topics discussed include international networks as the focus of the approach of the Yiddish press to immigration historiography, Yiddish as metonym for Jewish rights, Zionist orientation of the Yiddish press, Jewish nationalism, libels and limits of Yiddish influence, and Yiddish press in a colonial British world.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The Jewish "East" and its Restricted Agencies * .
- Author
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Moreno, Aviad and Karkason, Tamir
- Subjects
ZIONISM ,AMERICAN Jews ,ISRAELI Jews ,STATE power ,POWER (Social sciences) ,SOCIAL sciences education ,ASHKENAZIM ,PATRONAGE - Abstract
"The Jewish 'East' and its Restricted Agencies" is an article that examines the historical relationship between Jews and Muslims in Israel and the MENA region. It challenges the simplistic portrayal of Israel as a Western oppressor and Islamic entities as oppressed Easterners, arguing that this oversimplifies the complex dynamics at play. The article also discusses the treatment of Mizrahi Jews in Israel and their integration into a predominantly European-oriented Zionist society. It emphasizes the need to reclaim Jewish agencies and challenges the perception of Israel as a white-Ashkenazi presence in the Middle East. The article calls for a more nuanced exploration of Jewish history in Islamic contexts to give voice to Mizrahi Jewish experiences. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Other Jewish voices.
- Author
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Shimron, Yonat
- Subjects
- *
ANTISEMITISM , *ANTI-Jewish boycotts , *ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism , *JUDAISM & state - Abstract
The article focuses on the mainstream American Jewish institutions' condemnation of pro-Palestinian protests on campuses, supporting Israel and labeling critics as antisemitic. It discusses historical ambivalence among American Jewish leaders toward Zionism until the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and examines how dissent on Israel has been increasingly silenced.
- Published
- 2024
14. Exodus , Nakba Denialism, and the Mobilization of Anti-Arab Racism.
- Author
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Nassar, Maha
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *NAKBA, 1947-1948 , *JEWISH nationalism , *JEWISH identity , *IMPERIALISM - Abstract
Nakba denialism – that is, denying Zionist culpability for the mass expulsions of Palestinian Arabs from their homeland in 1948 – has long been a feature of US discourse on Palestine. Through a content analysis of Leon Uris' 1958 novel, Exodus, I argue that Nakba denialism rests on three anti-Arab racist tropes. The first trope presents Palestinian Arabs as lacking religious attachment to Palestine, the second trope claims they lack modern feelings of national identity, and the third trope claims they are easily induced to commit acts of violence by their ruthless leaders. Through the deployment of these tropes, the Exodus narrative popularized key elements of Nakba denialism in US discourse by blaming the victims of settler colonial violence for the expulsions they faced. More broadly, this article shows how the imbrication of race and settler colonialism functions to epistemologically erase the very acts of settler colonial violence that produce racialized Others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The Palestine Exception, Racialization and Invisibilization: From Israel (Palestine) to North America (Turtle Island).
- Author
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Abdo, Nahla
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISTS , *RACIALIZATION , *HUMAN rights organizations , *ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
This paper contends that the Zionist policies implemented by Israel had and continue to have a grave impact not only on the Palestinians in historic Palestine alone but also follows them in the diaspora, where some Palestinians have taken refuge. This article argues that Israel's apartheid regime, exposed by various international Human Rights Organizations, is not a recent discovery. Apartheid, the exclusion of the natives, and their racialization have accompanied the Zionist movement since its inception. Crucial questions raised in this paper include how Palestine and the Palestinians are conceived by Zionism, in and outside of Israel, and how they are perceived by the West, especially within the Canadian context. This paper pays special attention to comparing the experience of Palestinians with that of North America's Indigenous population, specifically concerning Israel's and Canada's colonial policies towards the Indigenous peoples. It also discusses the impact of Israel's policies of silencing and vilification that doggedly follow Palestinians into the diaspora: vilifications and silencing enacted by the Israel lobby through its various Zionist (Jewish) branches, whose primary role is to silence and vilify the Palestinians and curb criticism of Israel and Zionism. This policy, it is argued, is strongly supported by Canada, structurally, institutionally and through media propaganda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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16. Nation versus State: A Comparative Inquiry into A. D. Gordon's and Hannah Arendt's Social and Political Thought and Their Views of the Jewish State.
- Author
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Shamis, Asaf J.
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL philosophy , *NATIONAL self-determination , *COUNTRIES , *ANTI-Zionism - Abstract
The paper offers a first comparison and critical review of the social and political theories of German-Jewish political thinker Hannah Arendt and Russian-born Zionist thinker Aaron David (A. D.) Gordon. Bringing these two thinkers into conversation sheds light on their distinctive human ontologies and competing theories of labor that led them, in turn, to critically assess modern politics. Subsequently, the analysis identifies the two thinkers' opposing conceptual trajectories as underpinning their competing perspectives on the Jewish state. Whereas Arendt's commitment to upholding neutral political spaces led her to call for safeguarding the state from the Jewish nation, Gordon's view of nations as corporeal-organic entities led him to advocate securing the Jewish nation from statist institutions. In broader terms, the analysis seeks to add to the burgeoning literature in recent years that revisits the theoretical and ideological parameters conventionally understood as underlying the historical debate about the Jewish state. The analysis shows that whereas Gordon, as a Zionist thinker, set forth an antistatist doctrine, the non-Zionist Arendt assigned a key role to the state in securing Jewish national self-determination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Nahum Slouschz and the Birth of Hebraic Mediterraneità.
- Author
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Dubnov, Arie M.
- Subjects
JEWISH nationalism ,JEWISH identity ,ARCHAEOLOGY - Abstract
The article focuses on Nahum Slouschz's concept of "Hebraic Mediterraneità" and its role in Jewish nationalism. Topics include Slouschz's integration of philology, archaeology, and history in developing this vision, the influence of his ideas from Odesa to Paris, and how Itamar Ben-Avi expanded and popularized Mediterraneanism to support his cantonization plan for mandatory Palestine.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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18. Kafka Agonistes.
- Author
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MASON, DAVID
- Subjects
- *
AUTHORS , *THEOLOGY , *JEWISH identity , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The article explores Franz Kafka's complex life and work, revealing him as a writer who championed defeat and struggled to define himself. The article delves into Kafka's personal struggles, his fascination with theology and Jewish identity, and the intricate connections between his diaries and his unique literary creations.
- Published
- 2023
19. Discovering the Depths Within: Kook's Zionism and the Philosophy of Life of Henri Bergson.
- Author
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Amati, Ghila
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *RABBIS , *JEWS , *CREATIVE ability , *SELF - Abstract
This article reexamines Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaCohen Kook's (1865–1935) approach to Zionism, by proposing a reading of Kook's Zionism through the lens of the Lebensphilosophie (The Philosophy of Life) of the French philosopher Henri Bergson (1859–1941). I show that we can clarify Kook's view of freedom, the self and creativity and its essential connection to Zionism, therefore, proposing a new understanding of the meaning that Jewish nationalism assumes in Kook's thought, thanks to the application of the model of freedom and creativity developed by Bergson to Kook's writings. Especially for Kook, I show that Jewish nationalism is seen as a means for the Jewish People to return to their true self and through this connection attain true freedom. Only when a nation realizes its freedom by a return to its own original self, it can be creative. This is how I explain the connection that Kook draws between a return to the Land of Israel and the ability of Israel as a people to finally be able to be creative. Finally, I argue that this understanding of nationalism adds a new layer to the essential place that the territory assumes in Kook's thought. A State of Israel outside its original land can attain the goal of autonomous self-governance but lacks the ability to inspire the reconnection of the nation to its own original self. The Jewish People as a collective cannot connect to their authentic self away from the Land of Israel, consequently, the Land of Israel is the only place in which they can be truly free. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Handelsvolk: Marx's View of the Jews as a Trading-People and its Implications.
- Author
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Navon, Tom
- Subjects
COMMUNISM ,BUSINESSMEN ,JEWISH history ,JEWISH nationalism ,JEWISH identity - Abstract
This article analyses the usage of the German term Handelsvolk (trading-people) by Karl Marx and other Marxists in relation to Jewish history. The question is: what can we learn from the different interpretations of this term on the evolution of the relationship between Marxism and the so-called Jewish question? This exploration sheds new light on shifts in the definition of the Jews, both by Marx in the mid-19th century and by Jewish Marxists of various political parties in the mid-20th century. These shifts reflect changing social and political circumstances. In Marx's case, it was mainly his own migration that exposed him to different social environments and thus influenced his theoretical understanding. In the case of the Jewish Marxists, active during the period of the Third Reich, the term served as a means to qualify Jewish nationalism vis-à-vis the persecution and destruction of European Jewry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Was There a Jerusalem School of Modern Jewish Politics? A Case Study in the Organization, Construction, Production, and Limits of Knowledge.
- Author
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Ury, Scott
- Subjects
- *
JEWISH politics & government , *JEWISH women - Abstract
This article examines how two central scholars based at the Hebrew University's Institute of Contemporary Jewry, Jonathan Frankel, and Ezra Mendelsohn, conceived, created, and codified the academic sub-field of modern Jewish politics. The article begins by discussing studies by earlier historians of the Jews like Salo W. Baron, Shmuel Ettinger, and Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi whose work often touched upon the intersection between Jews and politics. While Mendelsohn and Frankel's research was based upon key concepts developed by these scholars, their focus on the centrality of Jewish agency, the role of the Jewish intelligentsia, and the turn to "the (Jewish) people" helped create a new scholarly framework for imagining, analyzing, and researching modern Jewish politics. Despite their many achievements, they both overlooked several important topics in modern Jewish history including the role of religion, the activities of Jewish women, the experiences of Jews in North Africa and the Middle East, and the impact of Jewish politics on the Palestinians. By examining how these topics are dealt with in more recent works, the penultimate section in this article points to both the continuing influence of Mendelsohn and Frankel's scholarly paradigm as well as some of its inherent limits. In doing so, this analysis of modern Jewish politics makes for an intriguing case study regarding the organization, construction, and production of a particular field of knowledge while simultaneously raising critical questions regarding the very nature, limits, and future of Jewish studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Beyond the Land : Diaspora Israeli Culture in the Twenty-First Century
- Author
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Melissa Weininger and Melissa Weininger
- Subjects
- Jews--Identity, Jewish nationalism--Art, Nationalism--Israel--Art, Jewish diaspora in literature, Jewish diaspora, Jewish nationalism, Jewish diaspora--Art
- Abstract
A re-evaluation of the meaning and function of diaspora in contemporary Israeli culture. This thought-provoking exploration of literature and art examines contemporary Israeli works created in and about diaspora that exemplify new ways of envisioning a Jewish national identity. Diaspora has become a popular mechanism to imagine non-sovereign models of Jewish peoplehood, but these models often valorize powerlessness in sometimes troubling ways. In this book, Melissa Weininger theorizes a new category of'diaspora Israeli culture'that is formed around and through notions of homeland and complicate the binary between diaspora and Israel. The works addressed here inhabit and imagine diaspora from the vantage point of the putative homeland, engaging both diasporic and Zionist models simultaneously through language, geography, and imagination. These examples contend with the existence of the state of Israel and its complex implications for diaspora Jewish identities and nationalisms, as well as the implications for Zionism of those diasporic conceptions of Jewish national identity. This dynamic understanding of both an Israeli and a Jewish diaspora works to envision a non-hegemonic Jewish nationalism that can negotiate both political imagination and reality.
- Published
- 2023
23. Bodies. Lives. Intertwined.
- Author
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Silverstein, Jordana
- Subjects
- *
JEWS , *ZIONISM , *HUMAN sexuality , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The article provides personal reflections on Expo 88 and explores the author's connection to their grandparents' experiences during the event. It also delves into the complexities of Jewish bodies and the influence of Zionism on shaping Jewish identities. The author contemplates the role of romance, sex, and intimate relationships in their grandparents' lives and reflects on the expectations and pressures placed on Jewish bodies within Zionist ideology.
- Published
- 2023
24. THE TRUTH BEHIND THE PALESTINIAN 'CATASTROPHE'.
- Author
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STERN, SOL
- Subjects
- *
NAKBA, 1947-1948 , *PALESTINIANS , *ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism ,OSLO Accords (1993) ,ISRAEL-Palestinian National Authority relations - Abstract
The article discusses Nakba narrative which undermines the possibility of reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians . It mentions denial of the legitimacy of Jewish history with the Oslo Accords of 1993 that created the Palestinian Authority (PA) and gave it the power to govern parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It reports how it allowed the Palestinians to build their own national institutions, including schools, universities and museums.
- Published
- 2023
25. Inside 10 New Haggadahs for 2024: America and Israel Take Their Places at the Seder Table.
- Author
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Cramer, Philissa and Schwartz, Penny
- Subjects
POPULAR culture ,ISRAEL-Hamas War, 2023- ,HUMAN rights violations ,STRATEGIC Defense Initiative ,JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The article focuses on the diverse array of new Passover Haggadahs for 2024, covering themes such as American patriotism, Zionism, and addressing current events, particularly the Israel-Hamas conflict. Topics include Haggadahs inspired by Star Wars and Mel Brooks, supplements focusing on the Oct. 7 attack on Israel, and editions aimed at families and those interested in human rights.
- Published
- 2024
26. Is Egalitarian Zionism Wrongful Colonialism?
- Author
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Benbaji, Yitzhak
- Subjects
EQUALITY ,ZIONISM ,JEWISH nationalism ,IMPERIALISM - Abstract
Many observers argue that in its very beginning, Zionism was an instance of wrongful settler colonialism. Are they right? I will address this question by examining the vision of Egalitarian Zionism in light of various theories of the wrongfulness of colonialism. I will argue that no theory decisively supports a positive answer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Belonging from afar. Diasporic religiosity among the Jews of Mashhad.
- Author
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Sadjed, Ariane
- Subjects
- *
IRANIAN Jews , *MASHHADIS (Crypto-Jews) , *DIASPORA , *RELIGIOUS identity , *CONVERSION to Judaism , *JEWISH nationalism - Abstract
The Mashhadi Jewish community spread from its origins in Mashhad, Iran, to different countries in Europe, Israel and the United States from the mid-twentieth century onward. This paper discusses how the Mashhadi diaspora reframed their religious and ethnic identification in order to meet modern demands of exclusive belonging. Having lived as crypto-Jews in Iran roughly from the 1840s until the 1920s, the Mashhadi Jews have developed a distinct social identity with sharp communal boundaries, but also a narrative of the past that reframes ambiguities and their immersion in the Persianate context anew, after the Persianate societies in which their identities were integrated, dissolved into modern nation states. Departing from an exclusive focus on conversion, the paper traces the development of these narratives and new traditions as a way to establish a Jewish identity outside of Iran, rendering religiosity the main venue for performing authenticity and belonging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Hellenistic Inter-state Political Ethics and the Emergence of the Jewish State
- Author
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Doron Mendels and Doron Mendels
- Subjects
- Judaism and state, Jews--History--586 B.C.-70 A.D, Jewish nationalism, Ethnicity--Religious aspects--Judaism
- Abstract
Against the background of a reconstructed inter-state ethical code, the rise of the Hasmoneans,Judea's ruling dynasty, is given a new perspective. Doron Mendels explores how concepts such as liberty, justice, fairness, loyalty, reciprocity, adherence to ancestral laws, compassion, accountability and love of fatherland became meaningful in the relations between nations in the Hellenistic Mediterranean sphere, as well as between ruling empires and their subject states. The emerging Jewish state echoed this ethical system.
- Published
- 2022
29. Krav Maga and the Making of Modern Israel : For Zion's Sake
- Author
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Andrea Molle and Andrea Molle
- Subjects
- Nationalism and sports--Israel, Self-defense--Political aspects--Israel, Krav maga, Jewish nationalism, Jews--Identity, Martial arts--Political aspects--Israel, Hand-to-hand fighting--Political aspects--Israel
- Abstract
This book examines the profound interplay of martial arts, combative, and self-defense disciplines with nationalism and ethno-religious politics through the analysis of Zionism, the birth of the State of Israel, antisemitism, and the life of the contemporary Jewish Diaspora in the United States. It connects martial arts studies and political science, spearheading the new field of political hoplology. Focusing on the complex formative process of national communities, their growth, resilience, and consequences for the individuals, Krav Maga and the Making of Modern Israel presents the unique case of Krav Maga (literally hand to hand combat), a self-defense system developed between the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, which is now considered a staple of Israeli culture and a prime self-defense practice. Through its chapters, the book provides strong evidence supporting the idea that physical violence is indeed needed as a unifying experience to allow national communities to emerge and thrive. Furthermore, it examines the growing importance of violence for modern democratic societies and suggests the existence of a “gladiatorial effect,” or the need for a certain level of violence to exist to maintain a harmonious, stable, and cooperative society.
- Published
- 2022
30. Skeletons in the Hebrew Closet: Yiddish Translations of "In the City of Killing" by Y. L. Peretz and H. N. Bialik and the Conflict over Revival.
- Author
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Masel, Roni
- Subjects
- *
JEWISH nationalism , *JEWISH identity , *NATIONALISM , *JEWISH art & symbolism - Abstract
The scholarship on Ḥayyim Naḥman Bialik's most canonical Hebrew poem, "In the City of Killing," persistently returns to its origin story in the 1903 Kishinev pogrom. This article turns to the poem's Yiddish translations—the first by Bialik's colleague, admirer, and ideological opponent Yitskhok Leybush Peretz, and the second by Bialik himself—and challenges notions of origins, originals, and unfaithful translations. It pays attention to a consistently suppressed fact: parts of the poem in the canonized form known to us today, particularly those that bring the poem's fascination with the gothic and grotesque to new heights, were introduced into the poem through Peretz's Yiddish rendition. Bialik then borrowed these images and tropes and incorporated them into his own Yiddish translation, ultimately translating them into Hebrew and integrating them into the final, canonized version only in 1923. Rather than contesting accusations of Peretz's "disloyal" translation or accusing Bialik in turn of plagiarism, this article grapples with the philological impetus to search for definitive originals and the desire for textual stability. An entangled web of bibliographical evidence, unfaithful renditions, and unacknowledged textual relatives exposes translation as a productive and unruly site of literary transfer, as a site of conflict. That conflict should be understood in political terms, as a conflict over the means, character, and grounds for a Jewish national revival. The poem's translational history reconstructed in this article summons, finally, a renewed evaluation not only of the ties between Hebrew and Yiddish and between original and translation, but also more broadly of Jewish textual culture in Eastern Europe in the early twentieth century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Not a Prophet, A Mirror.
- Subjects
- *
AMERICAN Jews , *ISRAELI Jews , *POLITICAL philosophy , *PROPHETS , *JEWISH history , *MIRRORS - Abstract
Shaul Magid's Meir Kahane: The Public Life and Political Thought of an American Jewish Radical (2021) has the potential to urge American and Israeli Jews to "own" Meir Kahane and hold him up as a mirror reflecting the toxic and tragic dimensions of modern Jewish history. Such a look in the mirror can only happen once Jews see Palestinian suffering as central to the building of the state of Israel and also how they are complicit and implicated in such suffering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Zionism’s Redemptions : Images of the Past and Visions of the Future in Jewish Nationalism
- Author
-
Arieh Saposnik and Arieh Saposnik
- Subjects
- Jewish nationalism, Zionism--History--21st century
- Abstract
In this volume, Arieh Saposnik examines the complicated relations between nationalism and religious (and non-religious) redemptive traditions through the case study of Zionism. He provides a new framework for understanding the central ideas of this movement and its relationship to traditional Jewish ideas, Christian thought, and modern secular messianisms. Providing a longue-durée and broad view of the central themes and motivations in the making of Zionism, Saposnik connects its intellectual history with the concrete development of the Zionist project in Israel in its cultural, social, and political history. Saposnik demonstrates how Zionism offers lessons for a politics in which human perfectibility continues to serve as a guiding light and as a counter-narrative to the contemporary politics of self-interest, self-promotion and'post-truth.'This is a study that bears implications for our understanding of modernity, of space and place, history and historical trajectories, and the place of Jews and Judaism in the modern world.
- Published
- 2021
33. On Eretz Yisrael.
- Author
-
Slobedman, Daniel
- Subjects
- *
ZIONISM , *JEWISH nationalism - Published
- 2023
34. Israel Has a Jewish Problem : Self-Determination As Self-Elimination
- Author
-
Joyce Dalsheim and Joyce Dalsheim
- Subjects
- Jews--Identity.--Israel, Jewish nationalism, Self-determination, National--Israel, Jews--Politics and government.--Israel, National characteristics, Israeli
- Abstract
The long-standing debate about whether the State of Israel can be both Jewish and democratic raises important questions about the rights of Palestinian Arabs. In Israel Has a Jewish Problem, Joyce Dalsheim argues that this debate obscures another issue: Can the Jewish state protect the right to be Jewish, whatever form that “being” might take? Drawing on extensive ethnographic fieldwork, she investigates that question by looking at ways in which Jewish citizens of Israel struggle to be Jewish within the confines of a Jewish state. She focuses on everyday experiences, on public interpretations of the possibilities of being Jewish in the context of state policy, and on media representations of conflicts between Jewish citizens over social, religious, and political issues. Despite Israel's claim that every religious community “is free, by law and in practice, to exercise its faith, observe its holidays... and administer its internal affairs,” Israel is foundationally a Jewish state. It privileges Orthodox regulation of who will be considered a Jew, of marriage and family law, and of conversion. This arrangement, and the constant tensions it has produced over the years, is often understood as a compromise between secular and religious political factions. But this religious-secular framing conceals broader patterns inherent in nationalist projects more generally. Using insights from Franz Kafka's writing as a theoretical lens through which the ethnographic data can be viewed, Dalsheim interrogates the relationship between nationalism and religion, asking what kinds of liberation have been achieved by Jews in the Jewish State. Ultimately the book argues, in a Kafkaesque reversal of the liberatory promise of national sovereignty, that national self-determination involves collective self-elimination.
- Published
- 2019
35. Discovering the Depths Within: Kook’s Zionism and the Philosophy of Life of Henri Bergson
- Author
-
Ghila Amati
- Subjects
Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaCohen Kook ,Henri Bergson ,religious Zionism ,Jewish nationalism ,Lebensphilosophie ,philosophy of life ,Religions. Mythology. Rationalism ,BL1-2790 - Abstract
This article reexamines Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaCohen Kook’s (1865–1935) approach to Zionism, by proposing a reading of Kook’s Zionism through the lens of the Lebensphilosophie (The Philosophy of Life) of the French philosopher Henri Bergson (1859–1941). I show that we can clarify Kook’s view of freedom, the self and creativity and its essential connection to Zionism, therefore, proposing a new understanding of the meaning that Jewish nationalism assumes in Kook’s thought, thanks to the application of the model of freedom and creativity developed by Bergson to Kook’s writings. Especially for Kook, I show that Jewish nationalism is seen as a means for the Jewish People to return to their true self and through this connection attain true freedom. Only when a nation realizes its freedom by a return to its own original self, it can be creative. This is how I explain the connection that Kook draws between a return to the Land of Israel and the ability of Israel as a people to finally be able to be creative. Finally, I argue that this understanding of nationalism adds a new layer to the essential place that the territory assumes in Kook’s thought. A State of Israel outside its original land can attain the goal of autonomous self-governance but lacks the ability to inspire the reconnection of the nation to its own original self. The Jewish People as a collective cannot connect to their authentic self away from the Land of Israel, consequently, the Land of Israel is the only place in which they can be truly free.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Israelis Feeling Pain of Discord In Daily Lives
- Author
-
Kingsley, Patrick and Saman, Moises
- Subjects
Israel. Supreme Court -- Powers and duties -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Israel -- Political aspects -- Social aspects ,Judicial power -- Laws, regulations and rules ,Jews -- Territorialism ,Coalition governments -- Domestic policy ,Zionism ,Jewish nationalism ,Government regulation ,General interest ,News, opinion and commentary - Abstract
When Ana Lavi neared the gates of her village in southern Israel late one night in July, a small group of men appeared in the road, surrounded her car and [...]
- Published
- 2023
37. The Jews of Murrieta Hot Springs: Creating the Catskills of Southern California.
- Author
-
Friedmann, Jonathan L.
- Subjects
HEALTH resorts ,JEWISH art & symbolism ,JEWISH identity ,JEWISH nationalism ,JEWS - Abstract
The article focuses on the transformation of Murrieta Hot Springs in Riverside County, California, from a health spa resort established by Fritz Guenther in 1902 to a predominantly Jewish haven by the 1930s. Topics discussed include the resort's unintentional Jewish symbolism, the influx of Jewish patrons, the contrast with nearby resorts, and the role of Guenther's openness in fostering its Jewish identity.
- Published
- 2021
38. A Dream Come True
- Author
-
Eliezer Ben-yehuda and Eliezer Ben-yehuda
- Subjects
- Jewish nationalism, Hebrew language--Revival, Hebraists--Biography, Jews--Russia--Biography, Jews--Jerusalem--Biography
- Abstract
Eliezer Ben-Yehuda (1858-1922), a Russian Jew, was the leader of the movement to revive the Hebrew language-the only attempt we know of that succeeded in restoring an archaic language to use in everyday speech. This memoir is an account of his life until 1882, a year after he settled in Jerusalem, it contains a description of his early life in the
- Published
- 2018
39. Globalizing the holocaust: A Jewish 'useable past' in Serbian nationalism
- Author
-
Macdonald, David
- Published
- 2005
40. Who is a Yid? Reading the journal Der Yid beyond the Hebraist – Yiddishist binary.
- Author
-
Masel, Roni
- Subjects
- *
HEBRAISTS , *YIDDISHISTS , *ZIONISM , *DIASPORA - Abstract
The journal Der Yid was the first Yiddish periodical officially tied to a Zionist body. This article follows the shared genealogy of early Zionism and diasporic nationalism as expressed in Der Yid, and offers a revision to common notions on Yiddish cultural and political revival around the turn of the twentieth century. In contrast with a tendency to highlight a sharp divide between these movements, this article emphasizes the points of intimacy and convergence between the ostensibly opposing ideological and lingual choices of Hebraism-Zionism and Yiddishism-diasporism. More specifically, it analyses a controversy between Yiddishists and Hebraists, particularly Ahad Ha'am, generated by the very title of the journal during its first year of publication: Who is Der Yid – the Jew? Who is the ultimate imagined national readership and national collective of a Yiddish-language journal? By probing the populist, sentimentalist discourse that the journal produced, this article argues for a renewed evaluation of the presumably dichotomous constructions of Hebrew versus Yiddish, or Zionism versus diasporic nationalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Theopolitical Notes on Israel's Declaration of Independence.
- Author
-
Harvey, Warren Zev
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL rights , *EQUALITY , *JEWS , *MORAL attitudes ,BIBLICAL theology - Abstract
In 2018, the Knesset of Israel, led by its right-wing coalition, adopted the Nation-State Law, which affirmed that the State of Israel is the "nation-state of the Jewish people" and only the Jewish people. Many have contrasted this law with Israel's 1948 Declaration of Independence, which promised "complete equality of social and political rights" to all citizens, "irrespective of religion, race, or sex," and expressed a commitment to the moral teachings of the biblical prophets. The Declaration was written by socialists and rabbis, while the Nation-State Law was written by right-wing nationalists. The Declaration focused on three prophetic values: freedom, justice, and peace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
42. Crossovers : Anti-zionism and Anti-semitism
- Author
-
Shlomo Sharan and Shlomo Sharan
- Subjects
- Palestinian Arabs--Attitudes, Jewish nationalism, Zionism, Jews--Attitudes, Antisemitism
- Abstract
Crossovers compares Jewish anti-Zionism and Palestinian anti-Semitism from political and philosophical points of view. The authors'goal is to expose what is unique about these phenomena, and what they share, so that both ideologies and their practical impact can be better understood.The authors identify a symbiotic relationship between anti-Semitic Palestinian doctrines and those Jews who are anti-Zionists. There has been a great deal of research on these as separate phenomena, but there has thus far been no research that has noted their similarities. Palestinian anti- Semitism and Jewish anti-Zionism may stem from different sources, but they have similar consequences. Palestinian views derive from religious Islamic as well as nationalist- Arab roots, while the views of anti-Zionist Jews grew out of an ideological-Marxist-Trotskyite background. But both share a common goal: the destruction of the Jewish-Zionist nation, and a common strategy, to achieve a bi-national state as a first stage in the march to this goal.Jewish history is replete with examples of how Jews have ignored repeated threats and acts of violence against them. That characteristic of Jews reflects their Messianic belief, but it lacks a basis in history. That belief has resisted change even in the face of threats that were obvious and that have endangered Jewish lives in the past. Contemporary anti-Zionists share this optimistic outlook. Paradoxically, while the Jewish-Zionist State of Israel contends in public that another Holocaust will not happen and is patently impossible, the lesson of recent Jewish history is that a Holocaust can happen again. This work is unrelenting in its criticisms and tough minded in its assessments of the future. It merits careful, serious reading.
- Published
- 2017
43. A Palestinian Theology of Liberation: The Bible, Justice, and the Palestine-Israel Conflict
- Author
-
Ateek, Naim Stifan and Ateek, Naim Stifan
- Subjects
- Arab-Israeli conflict, Liberation theology--Palestine, Arab nationalism, Jewish nationalism
- Abstract
Addressing what many consider the world's most intractable conflict, Naim Ateek offers a succinct primer on the theology of liberation in the context of the Palestinian struggle for freedom and self-determination. From the historical roots of this struggle, Ateek shows how the memory of the Holocaust has served to trump the claims and aspirations of the native inhabitants, and how later Israeli occupation and settlement sin the West Bank have contributed to their suffering and oppression.As a Christian theologian himself, Ateek shows how Western Chirstian support for Israeli claims to the land rely on a particular and exclusivist reading of the Bible. In contrast, a Palestinian theology of liberation resonds wiht a counter-strategy for biblical interpretation, one that emphasizes the prophetic thmese of inclusivity and justice. Ateek concludes by providing broad principles of achieiving security, peace, and justice for all the peoples in Isareal/Palestine.
- Published
- 2017
44. Class And Ethnicity In The Pale : The Political Economy Of Jewish Workers' Nationalism In Late Imperial
- Author
-
Yoav Peled and Yoav Peled
- Subjects
- Jews--Soviet Union--Politics and government, Jewish nationalism, Jewish labor unions--Soviet Union
- Published
- 2016
45. Shifting Critical Approaches to the Elusive Jewishness of María by Jorge Isaacs.
- Author
-
Lindstrom, Naomi
- Subjects
- *
JEWISH identity , *JEWISH nationalism - Published
- 2021
46. Between Two Poles: Barukh Mitrani between Moderate Haskalah and Jewish Nationalism.
- Author
-
Karkason, Tamir
- Subjects
NATIONALISM ,ULTRA-Orthodox Jews ,MODERATION ,POLISH people - Abstract
Barukh Mitrani was an Ottoman maskil who wandered between the Balkans, Istanbul and Palestine. While living in Edirne, Mitrani established his first periodical, Carmi (Pressburg 1881). Carmi 's issues were an ongoing maskilic sermon, drawing on a deep acquaintance with the Jewish bookshelf. This paper examines selections from the fifth article in Carmi , 'Our Nationhood.' Influenced by the moderate Haskalah, Mitrani idealized a 'Golden Mean,' which sought to balance the agendas of 'the two poles': insular Ultra-Orthodox Jews on the one hand, and secularized 'Westernizers' on the other. Mitrani also espoused a Jewish nationalism which had affinities with the Hebrew 'republic of letters' and the national resurgence in the Balkans. He perceived every Jew as part of three circles: the individual, the family, and the nation. Yet his nationalism was not separatist; he obliged Jews to remain loyal Ottoman citizens and promote the Sultanate while also settling in Palestine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Negotiating and Performing "Jewish Australian" Identity in South-East Queensland's Jewish Community: Creolization, National Identity and Power.
- Author
-
Creese, Jennifer
- Subjects
JEWISH communities ,JEWISH nationalism ,JEWISH identity ,MULTICULTURALISM ,CULTURAL pluralism - Abstract
The Jewish community of South-East Queensland, Australia, has always been in constant negotiation with the mainstream Queensland society around it regarding its relationship with dominant Australian national identity. This results in two different forms of identity—a compartmentalized identity, where Australianness and Jewishness are experienced and expressed separately within their own discrete situations, and a creolized identity, where elements of both Australianness and Jewishness are taken and blended into a distinctive new cultural form. Using ethnographic data, this article explores the negotiation between Jewishness and Australianness in group identity. Rather than compartmentalizing Jewishness away from Australianness, a creolized performative "Jewish Australian" identity is given collective expression by the community. This allows the community to showcase an identity that embraces an Australian identity which is predominant across the nation, but reframes this with Jewish values, behaviours and symbols to empower their minority Jewish identity which might otherwise be dismissed and subjugated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The New Jewish Pioneer: Capital, Land, and Continuity on the US-Mexico Border
- Author
-
Greenberg, Maxwell Ezra
- Subjects
Ethnic studies ,Judaic studies ,Continuity ,Entrepreneurship ,Jew ,Jewish Nationalism ,Settler-Colonialism ,US-Mexico Border - Abstract
Ethnic Studies epistemologies have been central to the historicization and theorization of the US-Mexico border as an ordering regime that carries out structures of settler colonialism, racial capitalism, and white supremacy. While scholars of Jewish history have explored the connections between colonial borders, transnational economic structures, and Jewish merchants, little is known about the role of Jewish entrepreneurs in the process of modern US-Mexico border formation. This dissertation explores how state, corporate, and military imperatives of US imperialism between the American Southwest and Northern Mexico created the conditions for Jewish inclusion into a white settler class and a model of Jewish continuity beyond Europe since the mid-nineteenth century. To explore the imprint of US settler colonialism on Jewish settlement, inclusion, and continuity, Chapter one reviews how Jews have been historicized as exceptional subjects in the contexts of colonial Mexico and the modern American West. Subsequently, Chapter two utilizes archival sources to reinscribe the Jewish border entrepreneur into the history of capitalist and military expansion across the new US imperial frontier. Working across the economies of extraction, policing, and revolution, Jewish border entrepreneurs reflect how commercial middlemen were neither separate nor above the racial and colonial contexts in which they existed, but were rather active and benefiting participants.Next, Chapter three investigates a regional movement for Jewish agricultural colonization and immigrant re-settlement that originated in late-nineteenth-century California and imagined a semi-sovereign Jewish nation-state in Baja California, Mexico. The plan to establish a “Palestine on the Pacific” persisted through 1939 and suggests that ideologies of Jewish nation-building were informed by structures of US settler colonialism, including liberal articulations of peoplehood, citizenship, and territorial belonging. Finally, Chapter four employs place-based, autoethnography in a Jewish cemetery in the Sonoran Desert to understand Jewish interpolation into US settler society as an ongoing process that can be explored through the Jewish American non-profit industrial complex. To conclude, I discuss how writing Jews into a modern, critical history of the US-Mexico border region contributes to Jewish and Chicana/o Studies by expanding methodological approaches to the analysis of settler colonial and neoliberal economies, and racial ordering in North America.
- Published
- 2021
49. The Occupied Territories, Gaza, and Israel's Recent Slide to Authoritarianism.
- Author
-
Mautner, Menachem
- Subjects
MILITARY occupation ,FASCISM ,AUTHORITARIANISM ,CIVIL society ,CIVIL rights - Abstract
In recent years there have been numerous warnings in the press and in the social networks that Israel is about to convert its liberal democracy into a fascist regime. This Article argues that the occupation of the West Bank stands at the root of the most important processes that have been taking place in Israel in the past five decades. One of those processes is the erosion of Israel's liberalism. I claim that the prolongation of the occupation is the central, lasting threat to Israel's liberalism. In essence, the occupation breeds denunciations of and protests against the government and the Israel Defense Forces, and these, in turn, bring about measures on the part of the government and right-wing civil society organizations that undermine or threaten Israel's liberalism. In addition, the full-scale wars between Israel and Gaza, and the continuation of violence between the parties in the periods between the wars, undermine or threaten Israel's liberalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A Second Exodus: Ethiopian Jews in Israel Between Religion, Nation and State.
- Author
-
Marom, Marva Shalev
- Subjects
AMERICAN Jews ,JEWISH children ,NATIONAL character ,RELIGIOUS identity ,JEWS ,JEWISH identity ,NATIONALISM - Abstract
Copyright of Croatian Journal of Education / Hrvatski Časopis za Odgoj i Obrazovanje is the property of Uciteljski Fakultet u Zagrebu and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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