Academic literature on the topic 'Jewish territorialism'

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Journal articles on the topic "Jewish territorialism"

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ALMAGOR, LAURA. "Fitting theZeitgeist: Jewish Territorialism and Geopolitics, 1934–1960." Contemporary European History 27, no. 3 (2018): 351–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0960777318000206.

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This article demonstrates the connection between the ideology and activities of the Jewish Territorialist Movement and broader geopolitical trends and discourses during the late interwar and immediate post-war period. The Territorialists, active from 1934 within the Freeland League for Jewish Territorial Colonisation, were representative of such contemporary trends and discourses, especially those connected to prevailing approaches to peoplehood, territory and space. The Freelanders relied on accepted notions and practices such as colonialism and colonisation, ‘whiteness’, race, biopolitics an
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Cheyette, Bryan. "Israel Zangwill." European Judaism 57, no. 2 (2024): 4–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ej.2024.570202.

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Abstract Israel Zangwill (1864–1926) was the best-known Jewish anglophone writer and public intellectual during his lifetime. There has been a contemporary resurgence of interest in Zangwill's life and work in Britain, France, America and Israel, which will be discussed in the introduction and is illustrated by the articles in the special issue. I focus on the legacies of Zangwill both locally and globally. At the heart of the introduction is the way that Zangwill's legacy varies in different national cultures. It explores how Zangwill reuses the idea of the ghetto from the German tradition of
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Almagor, Laura. "“A highway to battlegrounds”: Jewish territorialism and the State of Israel, 1945–1960." Journal of Israeli History 37, no. 2 (2019): 201–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2019.1674011.

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Glaser, Amelia M. "A Chinese Soldier in Crimea’s Vineyards: Yiddish Poetry between Jewish Territorialism and Soviet Internationalism." East European Jewish Affairs 51, no. 2-3 (2021): 199–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13501674.2022.2088362.

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Joseph, Abraham Levi. "1907-1914, Terra prometida em terras angolanas: Dinâmicas e tensões (inter)nacionais." Revista Nordestina de História do Brasil 1, no. 1 (2019): 96–132. https://doi.org/10.17648/2596-0334-v1i1-985.

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Resumo: Este estudo analisa as tem&aacute;ticas e as raz&otilde;es pelas quais&nbsp;<em>territorialistas</em>&nbsp;e sionistas do&nbsp;<em>fin du si&egrave;cle</em>&nbsp;e das primeiras d&eacute;cadas do s&eacute;culo XX decidiram expandir os seus &ldquo;horizontes&rdquo; para assim contemplar outras op&ccedil;&otilde;es plaus&iacute;veis para a cria&ccedil;&atilde;o de uma p&aacute;tria israelita al&eacute;m da primeira e &oacute;bvia escolha, nomeadamente, a Palestina e a cria&ccedil;&atilde;o do futuro Estado de Israel (14 de maio de 1948). Ap&oacute;s uma breve apresenta&ccedil;&atilde;o d
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Shilhav, Yosseph. "Jewish Territoriality between Land and State." National Identities 9, no. 1 (2007): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14608940601145646.

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Mignolo, Walter D. "Racism As We Sense It Today." PMLA/Publications of the Modern Language Association of America 123, no. 5 (2008): 1737–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1632/pmla.2008.123.5.1737.

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The research that I reported in the darker side of the renaissance: Literacy, Territoriality and Colonization (1995) was driven by my desire and need to understand the opening up of the Atlantic in the sixteenth century, its historical, theoretical, and political consequences. How was it that coexisting socioeconomic organizations like the Ottoman and Mughal sultanates as well as the incanate in the Andes and the tlahtoanate in the Valley of Mexico were either inferior or almost absent in the global historical picture of the time? I became aware, for example, that people in the Valley of Mexic
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Peshkov, Ivan. "B(ordering) Utopia in Birobidzhan: Spatial Aspects of Jewish Colonization in Inner Asia." Changing Societies & Personalities 5, no. 2 (2021): 220. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/csp.2021.5.2.130.

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The borderline territory serves a double purpose, being simultaneously zones of cultural contact and cultural barriers–administrative and often civilizational. This ambivalence frequently affects borderline area inhabitants turning them into hostages of border management regimes and outside projections concerning their cultural and civilizational status, and the authenticity of forms of their culture representation. In the case of Birobidzhan, we are dealing with an absolutely modern project of creating ethnic territoriality without reference to the historical context and far from the places o
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Estraikh, Gennady. "Jacob Lestschinsky: A Yiddishist Dreamer and Social Scientist." Science in Context 20, no. 2 (2007): 215–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0269889707001251.

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ArgumentJacob Lestschinsky (1876–1966) emerged as the leading social scientist in pre-1917 circles of Yiddishist Marxist nationalists, most notably the Territorialists, who sought to create Jewish statehood outside Palestine. Lestschinsky played a central role in Jewish institutions formed in Ukraine in 1918–1920. A convinced anti-Bolshevik, he lived in Germany, then in Poland, America, and eventually in Israel. He combined two careers: a popular Yiddish journalist and an influential scholar. He conducted demographic and statistical studies under the auspices of the Yiddish Scientific Institut
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BECHHOFER, Robert Y. G. "THE NON-TERRITORIALITY OF AN ERUV: RITUAL BEARINGS IN JEWISH URBAN LIFE." JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM 41, no. 3 (2017): 199–209. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/20297955.2017.1355279.

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This paper considers the definition and meaning of an eruv1 as “territoriality without sovereignty” in Jewish tradition (Fonrobert 2005). It begins by exploring the origin and development of the term eruv itself, as well as its applications in different urban settings. It distinguishes between, on the one hand, the “enclosure” of the eruv that is made up of various natural and artificial structures that define its perimeter and, on the other hand, the “ritual community” created by the symbolic collection of bread that is known as eruvei chatzeirot. It suggests that much of the controversy, inc
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Jewish territorialism"

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Santos, Maria Medianeira dos. "Territorialidades judaicas no espaço urbano de Porto Alegre/RS." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/112208.

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A presente tese problematiza como os imigrantes judeus e seus descendentes vieram e vêm dominando e se apropriando do espaço nos diferentes processos de desterritorializações e reterritorializações judaicas, tendo a cidade de Porto Alegre, capital do estado do Rio Grande do Sul, Brasil, como foco de análise. Os imigrantes judeus e seus descendentes, em diferentes momentos históricos e geográficos, organizaram e implementaram nos seus novos espaços determinadas formas de dominação e apropriação. Isso permite evidenciar "geossímbolos" que estão presentes em determinadas cidades, que demarcam a p
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Pérotin, Côme. "Stratégies territoriales des Juifs hassidiques de Williamsburg, Brooklyn (New York) face aux mutations urbaines." Thesis, Paris 8, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA080127.

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La communauté juive hassidique de Williamsburg a formé progressivement dans l’après-guerre uneenclave religieuse fondamentaliste dans le sud du quartier. Ce projet d’appropriation du territoire aété menacé par la gentrification et le redéveloppement du quartier depuis les années 80. Il s’agitd’abord de montrer les enjeux soulevés par ces transformations et les stratégies mises en place par lesrésidents et les autres acteurs intervenant dans le quartier. Les juifs hassidiques ont eu une positionambivalente puisque les mutations représentaient pour eux aussi bien une contrainte que desopportunit
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Pérotin, Côme. "Stratégies territoriales des Juifs hassidiques de Williamsburg, Brooklyn (New York) face aux mutations urbaines." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Paris 8, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA080127.

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La communauté juive hassidique de Williamsburg a formé progressivement dans l’après-guerre uneenclave religieuse fondamentaliste dans le sud du quartier. Ce projet d’appropriation du territoire aété menacé par la gentrification et le redéveloppement du quartier depuis les années 80. Il s’agitd’abord de montrer les enjeux soulevés par ces transformations et les stratégies mises en place par lesrésidents et les autres acteurs intervenant dans le quartier. Les juifs hassidiques ont eu une positionambivalente puisque les mutations représentaient pour eux aussi bien une contrainte que desopportunit
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ALMAGOR, Laura. "Forgotten alternatives : Jewish territorialism as a movement of political action and ideology (1905-1965)." Doctoral thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/40730.

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Defence date: 4 December 2015<br>Examining Board: Professor A. Dirk Moses (EUI, supervisor); Professor Pavel Kolár (EUI); Professor David N. Myers (University of California, Los Angeles); Professor David Feldman (Birkbeck, University of London).<br>Starting with the so-called Uganda Controversy of 1905, the Jewish Territorialists searched for areas outside Palestine on which to create settlements of Jews. This study analyses both Territorialist ideology, and the place the movement occupied within a broader Jewish political and cultural narrative during the first half of the twentieth century.
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Books on the topic "Jewish territorialism"

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author, Barzilay-Yegar Dvorah, ed. Mashber "Ugandah" ba-Tsiyonut: The "Uganda" crisis in Zionism. Karmel, 2020.

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Shnell, Itzhak. Perceptions of Israeli-Arabs: Territoriality and identity. Avebury, 1994.

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Cohen, Richard I., ed. Gur Alroey, Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2016. viii + 359 pp. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190912628.003.0053.

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This chapter reviews the book Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization (2016), by Gur Alroey. In Zionism without Zion, Alroey examines the movement that became Zionism’s fiercest rival—Territorialism—and how it ultimately lost the ideological contest concerning the location of the future Jewish state. Zionism and Territorialism shared the same precursors, and their proponents held a similar worldview with regard to the urgency of providing a refuge for Jews. In contrast, there were those who called for integration of the Jews into
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Beyond Zion: The Jewish Territorialist Movement. Littman Library of Jewish Civilization, The, 2022.

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Benjamini, Eliahu. Medinot la-Yehudim: Ugandah, Birobidz'an ve-od 34 tokhniyot. Sifriyat poalim, 1990.

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Shelleg, Assaf. The State of Afterness. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1093/9780197786758.001.0001.

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Abstract The State of Afterness traces the cultural histories of contemporary music in Israel since the 1980s. Assembling the networks of composers trained in the post-ideological climate of the 1970s and 1980s and the compositional approaches that recorded the attenuation of territorial nationalism, afterness emerges as the state of being unconditioned by territorialism while opting for previously unavailable temporalities and ethnographies. If earlier the statist subject superseded or subsumed any competing political project, since the 1980s such self-referential acts have been losing their
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Hertsel amar. Zemorah-Bitan, 2011.

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Het Saramacca Project: Een plan van joodse kolonisatie in Suriname, 1946-1956. Verloren, 2011.

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Israel, Zangwill. The Voice of Jerusalem. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2005.

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Israel, Zangwill. The Voice of Jerusalem. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Jewish territorialism"

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Almagor, Laura. "Tropical Territorialism." In New Perspectives on Jewish Cultural History. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429324048-4.

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Almagor, Laura. "Jewish Territorialism and ‘Other Zions'." In Routledge Handbook on Zionism. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003312352-23.

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Bernasconi, Robert. "Extra-Territoriality." In Extraterritorialities in Occupied Worlds. punctum books, 2016. https://doi.org/10.21983/p3.0131.1.04.

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In his preface to Beyond the Verse,written in 1981, Emmanuel Levinas poses the following provocative question: “Can democracy and the ‘rights of man’ divorce themselves without danger from their prophetic and ethical depth?”1 The question is clearly in-tended to threaten the comfortable consensus that has gathered around these icons of our time and, more specifically, to displace what have come to be known under the title the “rights of man” from the context of the European Enlightenment with which they are so often identified. Levinas per-forms this act of displacement in the first instance b
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Ewence, Hannah. "Jewish Eastern Europe: Between Territoriality and Dispossession." In The Alien Jew in the British Imagination, 1881–1905. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25976-1_2.

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Flint Ashery, Shlomit. "The Litvish Community of Gateshead: Reshaping the Territoriality of the Neighbourhood." In Spatial Behavior in Haredi Jewish Communities in Great Britain. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-25858-0_6.

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Kim, Terri, and Leslie Bash. "Interculturality Between Majority and Minority in the European Context of Ethnic Nationalism." In Handbook of Diversity Competence. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-69308-3_5.

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Abstract This chapter considers interculturality through majority and minority power relations in the European contexts of ethnic nationalism, migration and diaspora from a comparative historical perspective. In the phenomenological framework of thinking, interculturality goes beyond a mere ‘tolerance of the other’. It requires engagement by employing a comparative gaze. The chapter starts with three propositions: first, international relations both influence and are influenced by the dominant worldviews and scholarly endeavours such as social Darwinism; second, the condition of international
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Tsitselikis, Konstantinos. "Linguistic Rights in Greece: Crossing Through Territorial and Non-Territorial Arrangements." In Realising Linguistic, Cultural and Educational Rights Through Non-Territorial Autonomy. Springer Nature Switzerland, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19856-4_8.

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AbstractSince 1913, when Greece significantly increased her territory, minority protection has come under the spotlight of international consideration and guarantees. During the past 110 years, language rights, among other minority rights, were either reluctantly granted or ignored. Although minority languages have been treated asymmetrically and incoherently, a particular pattern seems to have emerged: minority languages spoken by Christians (Vlach, Slavic languages, Arvanitika) are subject to assimilation dynamics, whereas minority languages spoken by non-Christians (Muslims, Jews) are gover
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Almagor, Laura. "Conclusion." In Beyond Zion. Liverpool University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621259.003.0006.

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This chapter argues that the Territorialist movement has to be understood within the broader context of Jewish politics to make sense of Territorialist history. It analyses how the resonance of contemporary geopolitical trends and debates within Territorialist history demonstrated the movement's—and by extension modern Jewish politics'—direct connection to global political developments that were eventually to enable the sought-after solution to ‘the Jewish problem’. The chapter then shifts to examine how the history of Territorialism contributed to a burgeoning body of scholarship that problem
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Almagor, Laura. "Introduction." In Beyond Zion. Liverpool University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621259.003.0001.

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This chapter examines the Jewish Territorialist Movement's ideology and activities and the place the movement occupied within a broader Jewish political and cultural narrative during the first half of the twentieth century. By focusing on Territorialism's history, the chapter shows that twentieth-century geopolitics was defined not only by natural geography but also by aspects of human geography. The chapter also seeks to explain the seeming incompatibility between the Territorialists' attachment to internationalist and universal convictions and their positive evaluation of population movement
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Almagor, Laura. "Israel Zangwill and the Jewish Territorial Organization." In Beyond Zion. Liverpool University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781789621259.003.0002.

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This chapter recounts the origins and early history of the Territorialist movement, starting with the creation of the Israel Zangwill's Jewish Territorial Organisation (ITO) as the result of the rejection of the Uganda proposal of 1905. The chapter aims to show Territorialism's initial close ideological proximity to Zionism, followed by its rapid move away from these origins, turning the ITO into an independent movement. Focusing on the ITO's history, the chapter allows for an excavation of the main Jewish and geopolitical themes that developed into the driving forces of Territorialism from th
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