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Jewish Religious-Cultural Traditions and Identity Patterns in Post-Communist Hungary

  • Ildikó Barna and András Kovács
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© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Munich/Boston

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Table of Contents V
  3. Editors’ Introduction IX
  4. Section I: Contextualizing Jewish Life in the Midst of the “Old Continent”
  5. The Quest for the “Authentic” Central Europe 1
  6. Jewish Demography in the European Union – Virtuous and Vicious Paths 17
  7. Renewal or Regression? Jewish Self-Assertion and Re-Orientation in Twenty-first Century Central Europe 57
  8. Section II: Breaks, Changes, and Continuities in Austria and Hungary
  9. “Russians,” “Sephardi”, and “Israelis”: The Changing Structure of Austrian Jewry 73
  10. Jewish Religious-Cultural Traditions and Identity Patterns in Post-Communist Hungary 103
  11. The “Missing” and “Missed” Jews in Hungary 115
  12. Memories and Hopes: The Zionist Youth Movements and the Communist Regimes in Central Europe, 1944–1950 145
  13. Section III: Jewish Past and Present in the Czech Republic
  14. Jews and Jewishness in Cinema and Literature: The Case of the Czech Republic 165
  15. Ethno-religious Othering as a Reason Behind the Central European* Jewish Distancing from Israel 185
  16. Jews and Muslims in the Czech Republic – Demography, Communal Institutions, Mutual Relations 207
  17. Jewish-Roma Relations in the former Czechoslovakia: An Alliance Against Racism 235
  18. Section IV: An Ongoing Struggle with Judeophobia
  19. Holocaust Denial as a Symptom of Unresolved European History 253
  20. The Antisemitic Paradox in Europe: Empirical Evidences and Jewish Perceptions. A Comparative Study Between the West and East 269
  21. Appendix: Memories, Reflections, and Prospects
  22. What is Jewish about Contemporary Central European Jewish Culture? 283
  23. Preserving Jewish Cemeteries as an Actual Challenge in Contemporary Poland 291
  24. Holocaust Memorialization in Poland: A Case Study of Polin Museum 301
  25. Thirty Years After. The Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow of the Czech Jewish Community 311
  26. About the Authors 323
  27. Index of persons 329
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