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Homes Away from Home
ISBN/GTIN

Homes Away from Home

Jewish Belonging in Twentieth-Century Paris, Berlin, and St. Petersburg
E-bookEPUBDRM AdobeE-book
Ranking406227inGeschichte
CHF99.30

Description

How did Jews go from lives organized by synagogues, shul, and mikvehs to lives that-if explicitly Jewish at all-were conducted in Hillel houses, JCCs, Katz's, and even Chabad? In pre-emancipation Europe, most Jews followed Jewish law most of the time, but by the turn of the twentieth century, a new secular Jewish identity had begun to take shape.

Homes Away From Home tells the story of Ashkenazi Jews as they made their way in European society in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, focusing on the Jewish communities of Paris, Berlin, and St. Petersburg. At a time of growing political enfranchisement for Jews within European nations, membership in the official Jewish community became increasingly optional, and Jews in turn created spaces and programs to meet new social needs. The contexts of Jewish life expanded beyond the confines of "traditional" Jewish spaces into sites of consumption and leisure, sometimes to the consternation of Jewish authorities. Sarah Wobick-Segev argues that the social practices that developed between 1890 and the 1930s-such as celebrating holydays at hotels and restaurants, or sending children to summer camp-fundamentally reshaped Jewish community, redefining and extending the boundaries of where Jewishness happened.
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Details

Additional ISBN/GTIN9781503606548
Product TypeE-book
BindingE-book
FormatEPUB
Format noteDRM Adobe
Publishing date11/09/2018
Edition18001 A. 1. Auflage
Pages312 pages
LanguageEnglish
File size11011 Kbytes
Article no.4645707
CatalogsVC
Data source no.1759037
Product groupGeschichte
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Series

Author

Sarah Wobick-Segev is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Richard Koebner Minerva Center for German History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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