"Palestine and Jewish History " was first published in 1996.
Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press
editions.
This provocative and personal series of meditations on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict argues that it represents a struggle
not as much about land and history as about space, time, and
memory. Juxtaposing entries from Jonathan Boyarin's field diary
with critical and theoretical articulations, Palestine and Jewish
History shows not only the unfinished nature of anthropological
endeavor, but also the author's personal stake in the ethical
predicament of being a Jew at this point in history.
Boyarin comes to Israel as a specialist in modern Jewish
studies, an individual who has kin, friends, and colleagues there,
a scholar with a long history of peace activism. He interweaves
fascinating descriptions of ordinary life-parties, walks, classes,
visits to homes-with a selection of his related writings on
cultural studies and anthropology. Some sections are polemical;
others are witty analyses of bumper stickers, slogans, the
ambiguities in conversations. Boyarin foregrounds the messiness and
lack of closure inherent in this process, presenting "raw
materials" (field notes) in some sections of the book that reappear
in other sections as various kinds of "finished" products
(conference papers, published articles).
In the process, we learn a good deal about the Middle East and
its debates and connections to other places. Boyarin addresses two
fundamental issues: the difficulty of linking different sorts of
memories and memorializations, and the importance of moving beyond
objectivity and multiculturalism into a situated, engaged, and
nontotalizing framework for fieldwork and ethnography.
Palestine and Jewish History enacts rather than reports on
Boyarin's process of error, pain, impatience, uncertainty,
discovery, embarrassment, self-criticism, intellectual struggle,
and dawning awareness, challenging and engaging us in the process
of discovery. Ultimately, it gives the lie, as the Palestinian
presence does in Israel, to any concept of a "finishedness" that
successfully conceals its unruly and painful multiple
processes.
Jonathan Boyarin is the Leonard and Tobee Kaplan Distinguished
Professor of Modern Jewish Thought in the Department of Religious
Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is
the author of "Storm from Paradise," co-author of "Powers of
Diaspora," and the co-editor of "Remapping Memory" and "Jews and
Other Differences," all available from Minnesota.
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