Sites of Jewish Memory

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Algerian Jewish Community
Algerian Jews
Alliance Israelite Universelle Schools
Arab Jews
Arab-Jewish identity
Ben Barka
Bruce Maddy-Weitzman
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Cengiz Sisman
Claire Eldridge
Doron Bar
Emanuela Trevisan Semi
Emily Benichou Gottreich
Ephraim Nissan
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Erdem Guven
Giacomo Saban
Glenda Abramson
Holy Man
Inessential Solidarity
interfaith relations
Iraqi Jews
James Ambrose
Jewish Cooking
Jewish Memory
Jews in the Middle East
Jo-Anne Berelowitz
King David's Tomb
King David’s Tomb
migration narratives in Islamic lands
Mizrahi diaspora
Mizrahi Jews
Moroccan Jewry
Moroccan Jews
Moroccan Muslims
Morocco Jew
Murad III
Nomi Stone
North African Jewish Communities
North African Jewry
postcolonial memory studies
Raban Gamliel
Rabbi Shimon Bar Yohai
Reuven Snir
Sabbatai Sevi
Sabbatean Movement
Samir Ben-Layashi
Sephardi culinary traditions
Torah Scrolls
Turkish Jews
WJC Representative
Yaron Ben-Naeh
Yigal Bin-Nun
Yolande Cohen
Young Man
Zohar Amar

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415747868
  • Weight: 703g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book brings together a collection of 16 essays that explore Jewish communities in North Africa, Turkey and Iraq. The discussions are located primarily in the 20th century but essays also examine the Jewish community in 16th-century Istanbul, and in early modern Morocco. Topics include traumatic departures of communities from countries of centuries-old Jewish residence, and relocations; pilgrimages to holy sites by Mizrahi Jews in Israel; resonances of Shabbetai Zevi in Turkey and Morocco; "otherness" and the nature of homeland; the Sephardi culinary heritage as realised in the cookbooks of Claudia Roden; sites of memory, such as Kuzguncuk in Turkey; and a controversial view of the exclusions and erasures that Arabized Jews have undergone. In this unique collection a major, but not exclusive, theme is that of the instability of memory, and the attempt to understand the interactions between memory and history as Jews recount their experiences of living in, and often leaving, their past homelands.

This book was originally published as a special issue of the Journal of Modern Jewish Studies.

Glenda Abramson is Professor of Hebrew and Jewish Studies at the University of Oxford, UK. Her publications include Modern Hebrew Drama, The Writing of Yehuda Amichai, Drama and Ideology in Modern Israel, Hebrew Writing of the First World War, Soldiers’ Tales and articles on modern Hebrew literature, Jewish culture and war writing.