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From Europe's East to the Middle East: Israel's Russian and Polish Lineages
Contributor(s): Moss, Kenneth (Editor), Nathans, Benjamin (Editor), Tsurumi, Taro (Editor)
ISBN: 0812253094     ISBN-13: 9780812253092
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $71.25  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: January 2022
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- History | Jewish - General
- History | Middle East - Israel & Palestine
Dewey: 956.940
LCCN: 2021012560
Physical Information: 1.06" H x 6.14" W x 9.21" (1.77 lbs) 464 pages
 
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Publisher Description:

The overwhelming majority of Jews who laid the foundations of the Israeli state during the first half of the twentieth century came from the Polish lands and the Russian Empire. This is a fact widely known, yet its implications for the history of Israel and the Middle East and, reciprocally, for the history of what was once the demographic heartland of the Jewish diaspora remain surprisingly ill-understood.

Through fine-grained analyses of people, texts, movements, and worldviews in motion, the scholars assembled in From Europe's East to the Middle East--hailing from Europe, Israel, Japan, and the United States--rediscover a single transnational Jewish history of surprising connections, ideological cacophony, and entangled fates. Against the view of Israel as an outpost of the West, whether as a beacon of democracy or a creation of colonialism, this volume reveals how profoundly Zionism and Israel were shaped by the assumptions of Polish nationalism, Russian radicalism, and Soviet Communism; the unique ethos of the East European intelligentsia; and the political legacies of civil and national strife in the East European shatter-zone. Against the view that Zionism effected a complete break from the diaspora that had birthed it, the book sheds new light on the East European sources of phenomena as diverse as Zionist military culture, kibbutz socialism, and ultra-Orthodox education for girls. Finally, it reshapes our understanding of East European Jewish life, from the Tsarist Empire, to independent Poland, to the late Soviet Union. Looking past siloed histories of both Zionism and its opponents in Eastern Europe, the authors reconstruct Zionism's transnational character, charting unexpected continuities across East European and Israeli Jewish life, and revealing how Jews in Eastern Europe grew ever more entangled with the changing realities of Jewish society in Palestine.