1929: Mapping the Jewish World

1929: Mapping the Jewish World

1929: Mapping the Jewish World

1929: Mapping the Jewish World

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Overview

Winner of the 2013 National Jewish Book Award, Anthologies and Collections

The year 1929 represents a major turning point in interwar Jewish society, proving to be a year when Jews, regardless of where they lived, saw themselves affected by developments that took place around the world, as the crises endured by other Jews became part of the transnational Jewish consciousness. In the United States, the stock market crash brought lasting economic, social, and ideological changes to the Jewish community and limited its ability to support humanitarian and nationalist projects in other countries. In Palestine, the anti-Jewish riots in Hebron and other towns underscored the vulnerability of the Zionist enterprise and ignited heated discussions among various Jewish political groups about the wisdom of establishing a Jewish state on its historical site. At the same time, in the Soviet Union, the consolidation of power in the hands of Stalin created a much more dogmatic climate in the international Communist movement, including its Jewish branches.


Featuring a sparkling array of scholars of Jewish history, 1929 surveys the Jewish world in one year offering clear examples of the transnational connections which linked Jews to each other—from politics, diplomacy, and philanthropy to literature, culture, and the fate of Yiddish—regardless of where they lived. Taken together, the essays in 1929 argue that, whether American, Soviet, German, Polish, or Palestinian, Jews throughout the world lived in a global context.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814720202
Publisher: New York University Press
Publication date: 08/12/2013
Series: Goldstein-Goren Series in American Jewish History , #13
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Hasia R. Diner (Editor)
Hasia R. Diner is Professor Emerita at the Departments of History and the Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at New York University, and Director of the Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History. She is the former series editor for our Goldstein-Goren series in American Jewish History. Among her many books are Hungering for America: Italian, Irish and Jewish Foodways in the Age of Migration, The Jews of the United States, 1654 to 2000, We Remember With Reverence and Love: American Jews and the Myth of Silence after the Holocaust, 1945–1962, and Immigration: An American History, with Carl Bon Tempo.

Gennady Estraikh (Editor)
Gennady Estraikh is Professor of Yiddish Studies, Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies at New York University.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Hasia R. Diner and Gennady Estraikh
Part I: Global Ties
1 Living Locally, Organizing Nationally, and Thinking Globally: The View from the United States
Hasia R. Diner
2 Jewish Diplomacy at a Crossroads
David Engel
3 The Stalinist “Great Break” in Yiddishland
Gennady Estraikh
4 Permanent Transit
5 Polish Jewry, American Jewish Immigrant Philanthropy, and the Crisis of 1929
Rebecca Kobrin
6 Jewish American Philanthropy and the Crisis of 1929
Rakefet Zalashik
7 Territorialism and the ICOR “American Commission of Scientists and Experts” to the Soviet Far East
Henry Srebrnik
Part II: Local Stories
8 From Universal Values to Cultural Representations
Avner Ben-Zaken
9 The Struggle over Yiddish in Postimmigrant America
Eric L. Goldstein
10 When the Local Trumps the Global
Jeffrey Lesser
Part III: Literature
11 Patterning a New Life
Gabriella Safran
12 David Vogel
Glenda Abramson
13 Radical Conservatism
Joseph Sherman
14 Desire, Destiny, and Death
Mikhail Krutikov
Index
Contributors

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