Despite being the archetypal diasporic people, modern Jews have most often been studied as citizens and subjects of single nation states and empiresβas American, Polish, Russian, or German Jews. This national approach is especially striking considering the renewed interest among scholars in global a
Transnational Traditions: New Perspectives on American Jewish History
β Scribed by Ava F. Kahn
- Publisher
- Wayne State University Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 322
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Despite being the archetypal diasporic people, modern Jews have most often been studied as citizens and subjects of single nation states and empiresβas American, Polish, Russian, or German Jews. This national approach is especially striking considering the renewed interest among scholars in global and transnational influences on the modern world. Editors Ava F. Kahn and Adam D. Mendelsohn offer a new approach in Transnational Traditions: New Perspectives on American Jewish History as contributors use transnational and comparative methodologies to place American Jewry into a broader context of cultural, commercial, and social exchange with Jews in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and South America. In examining patterns that cross national boundaries, contributors offer new ways of understanding the development of American Jewish life. The diverse chapters, written by leading scholars, reflect on episodes of continuity and contact between Jews in America and world Jewry over the past two centuries. Individual case studies cover a range of themes including migration, international trade, finance, cultural interchange, acculturation, and memory and commemoration. Overall, this volume will expose readers to the variety and complexity of transnational experiences and encounters within American Jewish history. Accessible to students and scholars alike, Transnational Traditions will be appropriate as a classroom text for courses on modern Jewish, ethnic, immigration, world, and American history. No other single work in the field systematically focuses on this subject, nor covers the range of themes explored in this volume.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half-title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
PART I: An Anglophone Diaspora
1. The Sacrifices of the Isaacs: The Diffusion of New Models of Religious Leadership in the English-Speaking Jewish World
2. Roaming the Rim: How Rabbis, Convicts, and Fortune Seekers Shaped Pacific Coast Jewry
3. Creating Transnational Connections: Australia and California
PART II: From Europe to America and Back Again
4. Currents and Currency: Jewish Immigrant βBankersβ and the Transnational Business of Mass Migration, 1873β1914
5. A Taste of Freedom: American Yiddish Publications in Imperial Russia
PART III: The Immigrant as Transnational
6. βGerman Jews?β Reassessing the History of Nineteenth-Century Jewish Immigrants in the United States
7. The Gypsy in Them: Imagined Transnationalism amid New York Cityβs Little Rumania
8. No American Goldene Medina: Harbin Jews between Russia, China, and Israel, 1899β2014
PART IV: Creating New Homelands in Argentina, America, and Israel
9. Cultivating Jewish Farmers in the United States and Argentina
10. Transforming Identities: Bene Israel Immigrants in Israel and the United States
11. Transnational Aspirations: The Founding of American Kibbutzim, 1940s, 1970s
Contributors
Index
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