Promised Lands North and South : : Jewish Canada and Jewish Argentina in Conversation.

This exciting new collection of cutting-edge, multidisciplinary scholarship brings together analyses of two dynamic and longstanding Jewish communities. From historical, sociological, literary, and other perspectives, contributing authors offer rich new understandings of Argentine and Canadian Jewis...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Jewish Latin America Series ; v.15
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Boston : : BRILL,, 2024.
©2024.
Year of Publication:2024
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:Jewish Latin America Series
Physical Description:1 online resource (321 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • Figures and Tables
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Introduction: Common Origins, Distinctive Paths: What's to Be Gained by Putting
  • Part 1: Making People
  • 01 Jewish Migrations to and from Argentina and Canada: Tides, Waves,
  • 1.1 The Hydraulics of Mass Jewish Migration
  • 1.2 Population Size and Mass Migrations
  • 1.3 Four Tides
  • 1.3.1 From Eastern Europe to Argentina and Canada, 1880s-1920s
  • 1.3.2 From the USSR/FSU to Canada, 1980s-2019
  • 1.3.3 From Eastern Europe to Canada, 1947-55
  • 1.3.4 From Morocco to Canada, 1957-69
  • 1.3.5 Five Waves: Argentinian Emigration Post-1960
  • 1.4 Three Streams
  • 1.5 Theoretical and Methodological Implications
  • Acknowledgments
  • References
  • 02 Jewish Alterity and the Myth of the
  • 03 Argentina and Canada: Promised Lands for
  • 3.1 Moroccan Jewish Migration to Argentina: Economic Opportunities and Freedom of Religion
  • 3.2 Post-Colonial Migration to Canada: Circulations and Settlement
  • 3.3 Naming Hybrid Identities
  • 3.4 Conclusion
  • References
  • Part 2: Creating Community
  • 04 Jewish Support for Nationalist Movements in the Americas: A Comparative
  • 4.1 Peronism, Populism, and Politics
  • 4.2 Jewish Peronistas
  • 4.3 Québec's Quiet Revolution
  • 4.4 Conclusion
  • 05 Jewish Archives in Countries of Immigration: Argentina
  • 5.1 Canada
  • 5.2 Argentina
  • 5.3 Conclusion
  • 06 Charity, Health, and Community: The Hospital Israelita of Buenos Aires
  • 6.1 Filling Holes in the System
  • 6.2 Patients, Members, and Fundraisers
  • 6.3 Conclusion
  • 07 Mid-century Modern: Simón Bronenberg, Sammy Luftspring, and the Coming of Age
  • 7.1 Clues from Film and Literature
  • 7.2 Luftspring
  • 7.3 Bronenberg
  • 7.4 Postscript: the Fading of Two Greats
  • Part 3: Penning Culture
  • 08 Rewriting Lorca in the Argentinian and Canadian Jewish
  • 8.1 Argentina.
  • 8.2 Canada
  • 8.3 Conclusion
  • 09 Plowing Argentine and Canadian Soil: Jewish Colonization in the Writing
  • 9.1 History of Jewish Colonization in Argentina and Canada
  • 9.2 Conquering Nature and the Colonists' Civilizing Mission
  • 9.3 Overcoming Economic Misery
  • 9.4 Becoming Local
  • 9.5 Jewishness Adjusted
  • 9.6 Conclusion
  • 10 Writing Settler Relations: Jewish Literary Engagements with Indigenous Themes in Argentina
  • 10.1 Explicitly Colonial, Explicitly Settler, Eliding Indigenous People
  • 10.2 Ambiguous Machinations on Identification
  • 10.3 Confrontation, Contextualization, Caution
  • 11 Representing Jewish Experience: The Novels of Adele Wiseman
  • 11.1 Adele Wiseman
  • 11.2 Ana María Shua
  • 11.3 Conclusion
  • References
  • 12 Yiddish Theater in Montréal and Buenos Aires: Common Origins
  • 12.1 Montréal: One Unforgettable Season at the Monument National
  • 12.2 Buenos Aires in the 1920s: Stars and Scandals
  • 12.3 Conclusion
  • Part 4: Dealing with Difficulties
  • 13 What We Can Learn from a Comparison of Antisemitisms in Argentina
  • 13.1 Brief Historical Perspectives
  • 13.1.1 Argentina
  • 13.1.2 Canada
  • 13.2 The Contemporary State of Antisemitism in Argentina and Canada
  • 13.2.1 Argentina
  • 13.2.2 Canada
  • 13.3 Toward a Conclusion: What Have We Learned from Our Comparison of Antisemitism in Argentina and Canada?
  • 14 The Deafening Silence: A Reappraisal of the Early Canadian Jewish Response
  • 14.1 Wartime Commemoration of the Holocaust
  • 14.2 Postwar Commemoration of the Holocaust
  • 14.3 The Cost of Symbolic Holocaust Commemoration
  • 14.4 The Voices Restored: the Eichmann Trial and the Unmuted Voices of the Past
  • 14.5 Conclusion
  • 15 Under Suspicion: Argentina's Jews in the Optic
  • 15.1 The "Russian" Scare: Shaping the Image of Jews as Dangerous and Deceitful.
  • 15.2 The Jews: Allegedly Part of a Conspiring International Network
  • 15.3 Slipping into Violence
  • 15.4 Radical Polarization
  • 15.5 Zionism and the Fabled Andinia Plan
  • 15.6 Conclusion: Jewish Argentines under Suspicion and Their Revindication of Full Citizenship
  • 16 "A Rescued Jewish Young Lady Comes": Malka Owsiany's Reception and Testimony
  • 16.1 Malka Owsiany's Arrival and Reception in Buenos Aires
  • 16.2 Malka Owsiany Recounts, Marc Turkow Writes: the Origin of Dos poylishe yidntum
  • 16.3 Malka Owsiany's Arrival and Reception in Buenos Aires, in Retrospect
  • 16.4 Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • 17 Reimagining Testimony: Holocaust Memory and the Public Sphere
  • 17.1 Legacies of Violence and Belonging
  • 17.2 Testimony, Truth and Survival
  • 17.3 Reimagining Testimony and Belonging
  • 17.4 Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
  • 18 Jews in a Counterfactual
  • 18.1 Counterfactual British Argentina in General
  • 18.2 Jews in Counterfactual British Argentina-History
  • 18.3 The Jews in Counterfactual British Argentina Today
  • 18.4 Jewish Communities in Counterfactual Argentina
  • 18.4.1 Buenos Aires
  • 18.4.2 Other Cities and Regions
  • 18.5 Looking Forward
  • References
  • Index.