Crisis, revolution, and Russian Jews
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Bibliographic Information
Crisis, revolution, and Russian Jews
Cambridge University Press, 2010
- : paperback
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"First published 2009, First paperback edition 2010"--T.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection of essays examines the politicization and the politics of the Jewish people in the Russian empire during the late tsarist period. The focal point is the Russian revolution of 1905, when the political mobilization of the Jewish youth took on massive proportions, producing a cohort of radicalized activists - committed to socialism, nationalism, or both - who would exert an extraordinary influence on Jewish history in the twentieth-century in Eastern Europe, the United States, and Palestine. Frankel describes the dynamics of 1905 and the leading role of the intelligentsia as revolutionaries, ideologues, and observers. But, elsewhere, he also looks backwards to the emergent stage of modern Jewish politics in both Russia and the West and forward to the part played by the veterans of 1905 in Palestine and the United States.
Table of Contents
- Part I. New Dynamics?: 1. Crisis as a factor in modern Jewish politics, 1840 and 1881-2
- 2. Jewish politics and the press: the 'reception' of the Alliance Israelite Universelle (1860)
- Part II. Revolution and War (1905-21): 3. Jewish politics and the Russian revolution of 1905
- 4. 'Youth in revolt': An-sky's In Shtrom and the instant fictionalization of 1905
- 5. Yosef Haim Brenner, the 'half-intelligentsia' and Russian-Jewish politics (1899-1908)
- 6. The paradoxical politics of marginality: thoughts on the Jewish situation during the years 1914-21
- Part III. Ideological Conflict and Continuity: 7. The socialist opposition to Zionism in historical perspective
- Part IV. Overseas: 8. The 'Yizkor' book of 1911 - a note on national myths in the second Aliya
- 9. The bundists in America and the 'Zionist problem'
- 10. S. M. Dubnov: historian and ideologist
- 11. Assimilation and the Jews in nineteenth-century Europe: towards a new historiography?
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