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Ex-Soviets in Israel - From Personal Narratives to a Group Portrait (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,659
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Ex-Soviets in Israel - From Personal Narratives to a Group Portrait (Hardcover)
Series: Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology
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In the final years of the Soviet Union and into the 1990s, Soviet
Jews immigrated to Israel at an unprecedented rate, bringing about
profound changes in Israeli society and the way immigrants
understood their own identity. In this volume ex-Soviets in Israel
reflect on their immigration experiences, allowing readers to
explore this transitional cultural group directly through
immigrants' thoughts, memories, and feelings, rather than physical
artifacts like magazines, films, or books. Drawing on their
fieldwork as well as on analyses of the Russian-language Israeli
media and Internet forums, Larisa Fialkova and Maria N.
Yelenevskaya present a collage of cultural and folk
traditions--from Slavic to Soviet, Jewish, and Muslim--to
demonstrate that the mythology of Soviet Jews in Israel is still in
the making. The authors begin by discussing their research
strategies, explaining the sources used as material for the study,
and analyzing the demographic profile of the immigrants interviewed
for the project. Chapters use immigrants' personal recollections to
both find fragments of Jewish tradition that survived despite the
assimilation policy in the USSR and show how traditional folk
perception of the Other affected immigrants' interaction with
members of their receiving society. The authors also investigate
how immigrants' perception of time and space affected their
integration, consider the mythology of Fate and Lucky Coincidences
as a means of fighting immigrant stress, examine folk-linguistics
and the role of the lay-person's view of languages in the life of
the immigrant community, and analyze the transformation of folklore
genres and images of the country of origin under new conditions. As
the biggest immigration wave from a single country in Israel's
history, the ex-Soviet Jews make a fascinating case study for a
variety of disciplines. Ex-Soviets in Israel will be of interest to
scholars who work in Jewish and immigration studies, modern
folklore, anthropology, and sociolinguistics.
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