#smrgKİTABEVİ The Jewish Diaspora as a Paradigm: Politics Religion and Belonging -

Kondisyon:
Yeni
Basıldığı Matbaa:
Birlik Fotokopi Baskı
Dizi Adı:
Tarih: 89
ISBN-10:
9786059022026
Hazırlayan:
Nergis Canefe
Stok Kodu:
1199187908
Boyut:
14x21
Sayfa Sayısı:
400 s.
Basım Yeri:
İstanbul
Baskı:
1
Basım Tarihi:
2016
Kapak Türü:
Karton Kapak
Kağıt Türü:
Enso
Dili:
İngilizce
Kategori:
0,00
1199187908
573945
The Jewish Diaspora as a Paradigm: Politics Religion and Belonging -
The Jewish Diaspora as a Paradigm: Politics Religion and Belonging - #smrgKİTABEVİ
0.00
It is often suggested that all of the constituent groups of the Jewish Diaspora incorporated histories of persecutions and forced expulsions into their narratives of identity, even before the Holocaust and the foundation of the State of Israel in the 20th century. Is there indeed something unusual about the ‘homeland-diaspora paradigm' as the phenomenon finds its embodiment in the Jewish context? Or does the Jewish Diaspora constitute a paradigmatic case for Diaspora Studies in general? Being rendered stateless and having a religion and cultural/ethnic identity that one can ‘carry along' as one wanders from place to place--these appear to be the quintessential conditions for the making of the Jewish diasporic identity. Yet, these qualifiers also constitute a generic framework for diasporic existence of many other groups. If so, what is unique and what is comparable about the forced expulsions and persecutions throughout the centuries that resulted in substantial shift of the centers of Jewish life from Judea and Babylonia to the Ottoman Middle East, Europe, Asia, and finally the Americas? This edited volume is an attempt to answer these questions in a comparative context. It is a compilation of articles written by a group of scholars coming from different disciplines and yet all with a keen investment in Jewish and Diaspora Studies.

Introduction

New Perspectives on the Jewish Diaspora - Nergis Canefe
Part I: Conceptual Debates
The Jewish Diaspora as a Paradigm: Religion, Geography, and Politics - William Safran
Shape-Shifting as a Diasporic Constant: The Jewish Project as Paradigm and Challenge - Stuart Schoenfeld
Interrogating Diasporas in Dialogue: The Jewish Diaspora's Relationship to African Diaspora Scholarship - Kim Butler

Part II: The Jewish Diaspora in the Old World- Ashkenazim, Sephardim and Mizrahim
The Birth of the Judean/Jewish Diaspora(s)- Carl S. Ehrlich
The Emergence of a New Jewish Diaspora Conciousness 1837-1850 - Uri R. Kaufmann
The Globalization of Diaspora Communications Among Jews at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: An Analysis of Schmuel N. Gottlieb's - Ohole-Schem Ira Robinson

Ottoman Jews to Turkish Citizens: Characters in Search of an Author - Nergis Canefe

Part III: The Jewish Diaspora in the New World-The Canadian Experience in a Comparative Context

Rethinking Nation, Homeland, Diaspora: One Self-Narrative at a Time - Bina Toledo Freiwald

From Bi-Nationalism to Multiculturalism to the Open Society: The Impact on Canadian - Jews - Michael Brown

Toronto Jewish Diaspora as a Mentor to Chinese Canadians - Howard Adelman

"Welcome Home, I'll Be Your Tour Guide": Understanding the Experience of Jewish Diasporic Attachment to Israel - Emma Jo Aiken-Klar

Index

It is often suggested that all of the constituent groups of the Jewish Diaspora incorporated histories of persecutions and forced expulsions into their narratives of identity, even before the Holocaust and the foundation of the State of Israel in the 20th century. Is there indeed something unusual about the ‘homeland-diaspora paradigm' as the phenomenon finds its embodiment in the Jewish context? Or does the Jewish Diaspora constitute a paradigmatic case for Diaspora Studies in general? Being rendered stateless and having a religion and cultural/ethnic identity that one can ‘carry along' as one wanders from place to place--these appear to be the quintessential conditions for the making of the Jewish diasporic identity. Yet, these qualifiers also constitute a generic framework for diasporic existence of many other groups. If so, what is unique and what is comparable about the forced expulsions and persecutions throughout the centuries that resulted in substantial shift of the centers of Jewish life from Judea and Babylonia to the Ottoman Middle East, Europe, Asia, and finally the Americas? This edited volume is an attempt to answer these questions in a comparative context. It is a compilation of articles written by a group of scholars coming from different disciplines and yet all with a keen investment in Jewish and Diaspora Studies.

Introduction

New Perspectives on the Jewish Diaspora - Nergis Canefe
Part I: Conceptual Debates
The Jewish Diaspora as a Paradigm: Religion, Geography, and Politics - William Safran
Shape-Shifting as a Diasporic Constant: The Jewish Project as Paradigm and Challenge - Stuart Schoenfeld
Interrogating Diasporas in Dialogue: The Jewish Diaspora's Relationship to African Diaspora Scholarship - Kim Butler

Part II: The Jewish Diaspora in the Old World- Ashkenazim, Sephardim and Mizrahim
The Birth of the Judean/Jewish Diaspora(s)- Carl S. Ehrlich
The Emergence of a New Jewish Diaspora Conciousness 1837-1850 - Uri R. Kaufmann
The Globalization of Diaspora Communications Among Jews at the Turn of the Twentieth Century: An Analysis of Schmuel N. Gottlieb's - Ohole-Schem Ira Robinson

Ottoman Jews to Turkish Citizens: Characters in Search of an Author - Nergis Canefe

Part III: The Jewish Diaspora in the New World-The Canadian Experience in a Comparative Context

Rethinking Nation, Homeland, Diaspora: One Self-Narrative at a Time - Bina Toledo Freiwald

From Bi-Nationalism to Multiculturalism to the Open Society: The Impact on Canadian - Jews - Michael Brown

Toronto Jewish Diaspora as a Mentor to Chinese Canadians - Howard Adelman

"Welcome Home, I'll Be Your Tour Guide": Understanding the Experience of Jewish Diasporic Attachment to Israel - Emma Jo Aiken-Klar

Index

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