Oriental Neighbors

Oriental Neighbors
Author: Abigail Jacobson
Publisher: Brandeis University Press
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2016-12-06
Genre: History
ISBN: 1512600075

Focusing on Oriental Jews and their relations with their Arab neighbors in Mandatory Palestine, this book analyzes the meaning of the hybrid Arab-Jewish identity that existed among Oriental Jews, and discusses their unique role as political, social, and cultural mediators between Jews and Arabs. Integrating Mandatory Palestine and its inhabitants into the contemporary Semitic-Levantine surroundings, Oriental Neighbors illuminates broad areas of cooperation and coexistence, which coincided with conflict and friction, between Oriental and Sephardi Jews and their Arab neighbors. The book brings the Oriental Jewish community to the fore, examines its role in the Zionist nation-building process, and studies its diverse and complex links with the Arab community in Palestine.

From Shared Life to Co-Resistance in Historic Palestine

From Shared Life to Co-Resistance in Historic Palestine
Author: Marcelo Svirsky
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2017-11-07
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1783489650

In its unique analysis of resistance, this book sets up a new methodology with which to study the settler colonial project in Palestine. Levering the insight that Zionism evolved as a project of ‘double elimination’ – of both the Native and shared life – the book sees to inform political work and political imagination.

Textual Transmission in Contemporary Jewish Cultures

Textual Transmission in Contemporary Jewish Cultures
Author: Avriel Bar-Levav
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 361
Release: 2020-02-27
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0197516491

Jewish culture places a great deal of emphasis on texts and their means of transmission. At various points in Jewish history, the primary mode of transmission has changed in response to political, geographical, technological, and cultural shifts. Contemporary textual transmission in Jewish culture has been influenced by secularization, the return to Hebrew and the emergence of modern Yiddish, and the new centers of Jewish life in the United States and in Israel, as well as by advancements in print technology and the invention of the Internet. Volume XXXI of Studies in Contemporary Jewry deals with various aspects of textual transmission in Jewish culture in the last two centuries. Essays in this volume examine old and new kinds of media and their meanings; new modes of transmission in fields such as Jewish music; and the struggle to continue transmitting texts under difficult political circumstances. Two essays analyze textual transmission in the works of giants of modern Jewish literature: S.Y. Agnon, in Hebrew, and Isaac Bashevis Singer, in Yiddish. Other essays discuss paratexts in the East, print cultures in the West, and the organization of knowledge in libraries and encyclopedias.

Chinese and Japanese in America

Chinese and Japanese in America
Author: American Academy of Political and Social Science
Publisher:
Total Pages: 242
Release: 1909
Genre: Chinese
ISBN: