Between the Ottoman Empire and Modern Greece
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Köp båda 2 för 1969 krThe First Ten Years är en ambitiös sammanställning av de många uppmärksammade symposier, konferenser, konserter, litterära samtal, teatergästspel, samtal, läsningar, utställningar, böcker och mycket mera som kulturinstitutionen Judisk Kultur i Sve...
"A vital contribution to Sephardic history, Devin Naar's book lovingly but objectively fills in the Greek Jewish story of the interwar period. Jewish Salonica speaks through the words of its subjects, drawing on a dazzling array of local Jewish sources and casting this understudied period in a wholly new and dynamic light."Katherine Fleming, New York University, author of Greece: A Jewish History "Richly documented and a pleasure to read, this study offers a compelling account of how the Sephardic Jews of Salonica experienced the transition from being subjects of the multi-ethnic, multi-religious Ottoman empire to living as a minority in the Greek nation-state. A must-read for anyone interested in the history of this unique community."Matthias Lehmann, University of California, Irvine, and author of Emissaries from the Holy Land "[Devin Naar] has achieved something of signal importance with this volume. He has assembled a uniquely detailed profile of a leading Sephardic community under the Ottoman Empire and the succeeding Greek national state out of archives in Russia, Greece, Israel, the United States, and Spain."Stephen Schwartz, Middle East Quarterly "But Naar has not written a standard chronological history; rather, his study is a deep analysis of the Jewish community and its various components that proudly faced the challenges of the shift from a favored Ottoman millet to a beleagueredboth internally and externallycommunity in serious decline."Steven Bowman, Association for Jewish Studies Review "[Jewish Salonica] clearly contributes to our store of knowledge on the relationship between the transition from a multicultural empire to a homogenous nation- state, as well as on the changing meanings of such concepts as Sephardic, Jewish, community, self-governance, autonomy, the modern state, Ottoman, Greek, and Turk in the age of competing nationalisms."Irfan Kokdas, New Perspectives on Turkey "Naar by all means has successfully created more than a dignified memento to those [Salonican Jews] who perished [in the Holocaust], providing a significant and appealing scholarly contribution to Jewish studies, intellectual history, and identity formation, which will undoubtedly become a reference point for further research."Katerina Kralova, The Journal of Modern Greek Studies "Naar's book successfully changes the way we remember the interwar period for Salonican Jewry, from a period of decline to one of creativity in the face of severe obstacles, from imagining them as passive victims, to active agents who sought to perpetuate their role and presence in the ever-changing city as they attempted to find a space for themselves as 'part of Greece without relinquishing their Jewishness,' as Hellenic Jews, a dual status preserved from the Ottoman era."Marc David Baer, International Journal of Middle East Studies "Jewish Salonica by Devin E. Naar... is a very important new addition to the history of Sephardic Jews and the transition of Salonica from the Ottoman Empire to the Greek state, a history of "Jewish Salonica" as the title suggests....It is a significant book that will make a lasting contribution to the history of Jews in Salonica/Thessaloniki."Sakis Gekas, H-Nationalism "Naar's innovative book constitutes a substantial contribution to the Sephardi studies and fills countless gaps, specifically with respect to Salonica under Greek rule. Naar's longing to his ancestral city... did not diminish from his ability to precisely draw the image of this important and divided community in the eve of its existence, while stressing the liveliness and vitality expressed by this community and its institutions until transported to death."Yaron Ben-Naeh and Tamir Karkason, Europe Now "Jewish Salonica is an excellent book that invites broader discussions about ruptures and continuit
Devin E. Naar is the Isaac Alhadeff Professor of Sephardic Studies and Associate Professor of History and Jewish Studies at the University of Washington.
Introduction: Is Salonica Jewish? 1. Like a Municipality and a State: The Community 2. Who Will Save Sephardic Judaism?: The Chief Rabbi 3. More Sacred than Synagogue: The School 4. Paving the Way for Better Days: The Historians 5. Stones that Speak: The Cemetery Conclusion: Jewish SalonicaReality, Myth, Memory