Food for Thought: Transnational Contested Identities and Food Practices of Russian-Speaking Jewish Migrants in Israel and Germany
Autor Julia Bernsteinen Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 apr 2011
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783593392523
ISBN-10: 3593392526
Pagini: 451
Ilustrații: 35 color plates
Dimensiuni: 140 x 213 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: CAMPUS VERLAG
Colecția Campus Verlag
ISBN-10: 3593392526
Pagini: 451
Ilustrații: 35 color plates
Dimensiuni: 140 x 213 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.6 kg
Editura: CAMPUS VERLAG
Colecția Campus Verlag
Notă biografică
Julia Bernstein is a cultural anthropologist, sociologist and artist. She is a lecturer at Cologne University, the University of Applied Sciences in Frankfurt-on-Main, and Johannes-Gutenberg-University in Mainz.
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
1. Migration collages: Studying Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany
2. Transnationalism and capitalism: Migrants from the former Soviet Union and their experiences in Germany and Israel
3. “Chocolates without history are meaningless”: Pre- and post-migration consumption
4. Russian food stores in Israel and Germany: Images of imaginary home, homeland, and identity consolidation
5. Russian food stores in Israel and Germany: Different national symbolic participations and virtual transnational enclave
6. Transjewish affiliation: The construction of ethnicity by Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany
7. Winners once a year? Making sense of WWII and the Holocaust as part of a transnational biographic experience
8. “Will you prepare gefillte fish for Christmas?” Paradoxes of living in simultaneously contested social worlds
Bibliography
Index
1. Migration collages: Studying Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany
2. Transnationalism and capitalism: Migrants from the former Soviet Union and their experiences in Germany and Israel
3. “Chocolates without history are meaningless”: Pre- and post-migration consumption
4. Russian food stores in Israel and Germany: Images of imaginary home, homeland, and identity consolidation
5. Russian food stores in Israel and Germany: Different national symbolic participations and virtual transnational enclave
6. Transjewish affiliation: The construction of ethnicity by Russian-speaking Jews in Israel and Germany
7. Winners once a year? Making sense of WWII and the Holocaust as part of a transnational biographic experience
8. “Will you prepare gefillte fish for Christmas?” Paradoxes of living in simultaneously contested social worlds
Bibliography
Index