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Jews in the East European Borderlands
Essays in Honor of John D. Klier
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Edited by:
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Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2012
About this book
John Doyle Klier’s pioneering publications on the relations between Jews and the Russian social order—on topics such as public opinion, governance, conversion, Russification politics, antisemitism, and pogroms—have influenced an entire generation of new scholarship. Jews in the East European Borderlands, a collection of essays honoring Klier’s life and work, brings together some of the most innovative scholarship in the field. Focusing on the complex, often violent, entanglements between Jews and Russians, historians and literary scholars critically reassess the artifacts of high culture, including Yiddish and Russian prose and poetry, as well as dimensions of daily life, including letter-writing, diaries, the work of philanthropy, photojournalism, and the mass circulation press.
Author / Editor information
Eugene M. Avrutin (PhD University of Michigan) is assistant professor of modern European Jewish history and Tobor family scholar in the Program of Jewish Culture and Society at the University of Illinois. He is the author of Jews and the Imperial State: Identification Politics in Tsarist Russia (2010). He and Harriet Murav co-edited, together with Petersburg Judaica, Photographing the Jewish Nation: Pictures from S. An-sky's Ethnographic Expedition (2009). Harriet Murav (PhD Stanford University) is a professor in the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures and Comparative and World Literature at the University of Illinois. She is the author of Holy Foolishness: Dostoevsky's Novels & the Poetics of Cultural Critique (1992), Russia's Legal Fictions (1998), Identity Theft: The Jew in Imperial Russia and the Case of Avraam Uri Kovner (2003), and Music From a Speeding Train: Jewish Literature in Post-Revolution Russia (2011).
Reviews
Brian Horowitz, Professor of Russian and Chair of Jewish Studies, Tulane University:
"This volume . . . is a real bonanza for scholars of Russian-Jewish history. The essays are of high quality overall, and the book may serve as a mirror of what is happening now in the field of Russian-Jewish history and literature. . . . Essays such as these help brand the field as more than merely a subfield of Russian or Jewish history, but as a high-quality discipline in its own right."
"This volume . . . is a real bonanza for scholars of Russian-Jewish history. The essays are of high quality overall, and the book may serve as a mirror of what is happening now in the field of Russian-Jewish history and literature. . . . Essays such as these help brand the field as more than merely a subfield of Russian or Jewish history, but as a high-quality discipline in its own right."
"Jews in the East European Borderlands offers a dazzling cornucopia of pathbreaking scholarship on Russian Jewish history and culture. It is at once a fitting celebration of the life's work of a pioneering scholar and a moving tribute to his enduring influence."
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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List of Illustrations
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Contributors
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
14 - Part 1: History, Culture, and Everyday Life
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2. Yiddish in Imperial Russia’s Civil Society
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3. An-sky in Liozno: “Sins of Youth” and the Archival Diary
67 -
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4. In the Evil Kingdom of Things: Sholem-aleichem and the Writing of Everyday Life in Jewish Literature
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5. A Paper Life: Model Letters and Real Letters as a Key to Russian-Jewish Aspirations at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
106 - Part 2: Upheaval, Violence, and Antisemitism
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6. Violence and the Migration of Ashkenazi Jews to Eastern Europe
127 -
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7. Uses and Abuses: “Pogrom” in the Anglo-American Imagination, 1881–1919
147 -
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8. Look! Up There in the Sky: It’s a Vulture, It’s a Bat . . . It’s a Jew. Reflections on Antisemitism in Late Imperial Russia, 1906–1914
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9. Shots in the Back: On the Origin of the Anti-Jewish Pogroms of 1918–1921
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10. Between External Persecution and National Renaissance: Simon Dubnow’s Lachrymose Vision of Russian-Jewish History
202 -
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11. Soviet Holocaust Photography and Landscapes of Emptiness
224 -
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12. Transformed Myths in Verse: Boris Slutsky’s Three Holocaust Poems and the Question of Violence
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A Bibliography of John D. Klier’s Works
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INDEX
272
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
February 1, 2012
eBook ISBN:
9781618110510
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
350
This book is in the series
eBook ISBN:
9781618110510
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;General/trade;