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16. Poets and Poetry in Today’s Diaspora: On Being “Marginally Jewish”

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

© 2019 Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. CONTENTS vii
  3. List of Figures xi
  4. List of Tables xiii
  5. Acknowledgments xv
  6. Introduction: Homelands, Diasporas, and the Islands in Between 1
  7. Part I. Demography: Who Are the Migrants and Where Have They Gone?
  8. 1. Demography of the Contemporary Russian-Speaking Jewish Diaspora 23
  9. 2. The Russian-Speaking Israeli Diaspora in the FSU, Europe, and North America: Jewish Identification and Attachment to Israel 41
  10. 3. Home in the Diaspora? Jewish Returnees and Transmigrants in Ukraine 60
  11. Part II. Transnationalism and Diasporas
  12. 4. Rethinking Boundaries in the Jewish Diaspora from the FSU 77
  13. 5. Diaspora from the Inside Out: Litvaks in Lithuania Today 89
  14. 6. Russian-Speaking Jews and Israeli Emigrants in the United States: A Comparison of Migrant Populations 103
  15. Part III. Political and Economic Change
  16. 7. Political Newborns: Immigrants in Israel and Germany 125
  17. 8. The Move from Russia/the Soviet Union to Israel: A Transformation of Jewish Culture and Identity? 139
  18. 9. The Economic Integration of Soviet Jewish Immigrants in Israel 156
  19. Part IV. Resocialization and the Malleability of Ethnicity
  20. 10. Russian-Speaking Jews in Germany 173
  21. 11. Performing Jewishness and Questioning the Civic Subject among Russian-Jewish Migrants in Germany 186
  22. 12. Inventing a “New Jew”: The Transformation of Jewish Identity in Post-Soviet Russia 196
  23. Part V. Migration and Religious Change
  24. 13. Post-Soviet Immigrant Religiosity: Beyond the Israeli National Religion 213
  25. 14. Virtual Village in a Real World: The Russian Jewish Diaspora Online 229
  26. Part VI. Diaspora Russian Literature
  27. 15. Four Voices from the Last Soviet Generation: Evgeny Steiner, Alexander Goldshtein, Oleg Yuryev, and Alexander Ilichevsky 251
  28. 16. Poets and Poetry in Today’s Diaspora: On Being “Marginally Jewish” 266
  29. 17. Triple Identities: Russian-Speaking Jews as German, American, and Israeli Writers 286
  30. Afterword: The Future of a Diaspora 299
  31. Notes on Contributors 303
  32. Index 307
The New Jewish Diaspora
This chapter is in the book The New Jewish Diaspora
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