Mongrels or Marvels

Mongrels or Marvels
Title Mongrels or Marvels PDF eBook
Author Deborah A. Starr
Publisher Stanford University Press
Total Pages 303
Release 2011-05-17
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 0804769532

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This collection of essays and fiction offers critical insights into Egypt's cosmopolitan past, Jewish-Levantine identities, and the possibilities for cultural integration within Israel and beyond.

Jacqueline Kahanoff

Jacqueline Kahanoff
Title Jacqueline Kahanoff PDF eBook
Author David Ohana
Publisher Indiana University Press
Total Pages 348
Release 2023-11-07
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0253066905

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Jacqueline Kahanoff: A Levantine Woman is the first intellectual biography of this remarkable Egyptian-Jewish intellectual, whose work has secured her place in literary pantheon as a herald of Levantine, Mediterranean, and transnational culture. Growing up Jewish in cosmopolitan Egypt in the 1920s and 1930s, Jacqueline Kahanoff experienced a bustling Middle East enriched by diverse languages, religions, and peoples who nonetheless were deeply connected to each other through history, business, daily practices, and shared landscape. At the age of twenty-four, Kahanoff immigrated to the United States. Her stories, essays, and short autobiographical novel attest to her penchant to cross boundaries, generations, social classes, sexes, and Western and Eastern constructs. After immigrating to Israel in the early 1950s, she critically addressed the country's "provinciality" and "ethnic nationalism" as seen through her conception of a transnational Levantine culture. Through many writings, Kahanoff set forth her distinctive vision of Israel as a Mediterranean country with a broad, multicultural Levantine identity. Drawing on an extensive array of sources, ranging from interviews with Jacqueline Kahanoff's acquaintances and contemporaries to unpublished writings, David Ohana explores her fascinating life and intellectual journey from Cairo to Tel Aviv. The encompassing vision of a Levantine Israel made Kahanoff the initiator of a different cultural possibility, more extensive than that offered in her time, and also, perhaps, than is offered today.

Mongrels or Marvels

Mongrels or Marvels
Title Mongrels or Marvels PDF eBook
Author Deborah A. Starr
Publisher Stanford University Press
Total Pages 304
Release 2011-05-17
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 0804777888

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The writings of Jacqueline Shohet Kahanoff (1917–1979) offer a refreshing reassessment of Arab-Jewish relations in the Middle East. A member of the bourgeois Jewish community in Cairo, Kahanoff grew up in a time of coexistence. She spent the years of World War II in New York City, where she launched her writing career with publications in prominent American journals. Kahanoff later settled in Israel, where she became a noted cultural and literary critic. Mongrels or Marvels offers Kahanoff's most influential and engaging writings, selected from essays and works of fiction that anticipate contemporary concerns about cultural integration in immigrant societies. Confronted with the breakdown of cosmopolitan Egyptian society, and the stereotypes she encountered as a Jew from the Arab world, she developed a social model, Levantinism, that embraces the idea of a pluralist, multicultural society and counters the prevailing attitudes and identity politics in the Middle East with the possibility of mutual respect and acceptance.

The Place of the Mediterranean in Modern Israeli Identity

The Place of the Mediterranean in Modern Israeli Identity
Title The Place of the Mediterranean in Modern Israeli Identity PDF eBook
Author Alexandra Nocke
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 321
Release 2009-03-25
Genre Religion
ISBN 9004173242

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This book offers new perspectives on Israel’s evolving Mediterranean identity, which centers around the longing to find a "natural" place in the region. It explores Mediterraneanism as reflected in popular music, literature, architecture, and daily life, and analyzes ways in which the notion comprises cultural identity and polical realities.

The Thousand and One Nights: Sources and Transformations in Literature, Art, and Science

The Thousand and One Nights: Sources and Transformations in Literature, Art, and Science
Title The Thousand and One Nights: Sources and Transformations in Literature, Art, and Science PDF eBook
Author Ibrahim Akel
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 363
Release 2020-04-28
Genre History
ISBN 9004429034

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The essays in this volume scrutinize the expanse of sources for The Arabian Nights or The Thousand and One Nights in all of their static and dynamic complexity. They follow the trajectory of the Nights’ texts, the creative, scholarly commentaries, artistic encounters and relations to science.

Birth-Throes of the Israeli Homeland

Birth-Throes of the Israeli Homeland
Title Birth-Throes of the Israeli Homeland PDF eBook
Author David Ohana
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 389
Release 2020-05-12
Genre Political Science
ISBN 1000067483

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The book brings forth various perspectives on the Israeli "homeland" (moledet) from various known Israeli intellectuals such as Boaz Evron, Menachem Brinker, Jacqueline Kahanoff and more. Binding together various academic fields to deal with the question of the essence of the Israeli homeland: from the examination of the status of the Israeli homeland by such known sociologist as Michael Feige, to the historical analysis of Robert Wistrich of the place Israel occupies in history in relation to historical antisemitism. The study also examines various movements that bear significant importance on the development of the notion of the Israeli homeland in Israeli society: Such movement as "The New Hebrews" and Hebrewism are examined both historically in relation to their place in Zionist history and ideologically in comparison with other prominent movements. Drawing on the work of Jacqueline Kahanoff to provide a unique Mediterranean model for the Israeli homeland, the volume examines prominent models among the Religious Zionist sector of Israeli society regarding the relation of the biblical homeland to the actual homeland of our times. Discussing the various interpretations of the concept of the nation and its land in the discourse of Hebrew and Israeli identity, the book is a key resource for scholars interested in nationalism, philosophy, modern Jewish history and Israeli Studies.

Modern Middle Eastern Jewish Thought

Modern Middle Eastern Jewish Thought
Title Modern Middle Eastern Jewish Thought PDF eBook
Author Moshe Behar
Publisher UPNE
Total Pages 302
Release 2013
Genre Social Science
ISBN 1584658851

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The first anthology of modern Middle Eastern Jewish thought