Young Tel Aviv
Title | Young Tel Aviv PDF eBook |
Author | Anat Helman |
Publisher | UPNE |
Pages | 225 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Business & Economics |
ISBN | 1584658932 |
Fascinating revisionist history of Jewish life in Tel Aviv in the Mandate era
Young Tel Aviv
Title | Young Tel Aviv PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | UPNE |
Pages | 226 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Travel |
ISBN | 1584658908 |
Fascinating revisionist history of Jewish life in Tel Aviv in the Mandate era
Youth, Identity, and Re-Fashioning Popular Music in Israel
Title | Youth, Identity, and Re-Fashioning Popular Music in Israel PDF eBook |
Author | Oded Heilbronner |
Publisher | Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Pages | 202 |
Release | 2024-08-06 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 3111235432 |
The book Youth, Identity, and Re-Fashioning Popular Music in Israel. 1950s–1980s aims to refresh the understanding of the relationship between social power relations, youth culture, and popular music in Israel. The authors discuss various perspectives regarding the axis of youth, popular culture, and music and present additional options for the discourse on these topics in Israel. Among its many new findings, the study discusses new insights relating to the increasing openness of Israeli culture to globalization, the decline of the collective culture of the Sabra, the rise of individual culture, liberalism and neoliberalism, the decay of Israeli consensus, and the melting pot idea and practices. In addition, the authors examine various perspectives on how Israeli culture and music have changed over the years and reacted to historical alterations. It reviews the tensions between modernism and postmodernism, localism and globalism, teenagers and their parents’ culture, ethnicity and class, hegemonic negotiations, and marginal subcultures. This book uses historical methodology combined with the assistance of cultural theories, historical surveys, and first-hand documents.
The Young Israel Viewpoint
Title | The Young Israel Viewpoint PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 764 |
Release | 1947 |
Genre | Orthodox Judaism |
ISBN |
I Am Your Dust
Title | I Am Your Dust PDF eBook |
Author | Gali Drucker Bar-Am |
Publisher | Indiana University Press |
Pages | 380 |
Release | 2024-11-05 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0253071534 |
Israel's cultural space is frequently studied as if it were synonymous with the Hebrew-Israeli one. But within the borders of Israel, a fascinating culture was (and continues to be) created in many languages other than Hebrew, reflecting its reality from angles that the makers of Hebrew-Israeli culture did not know and all too often lacked the tools to express. I Am Your Dust: Representations of the Israeli Experience in Yiddish Prose, 1948–1967 expands the boundaries of current studies of Israel's cultural history by presenting and analyzing Yiddish-Israeli prose written during the country's first two decades as an independent state. It offers a comprehensive study of that unique, and hitherto little understood, literature, a detailed historical documentation of the contexts of its production, and an eye-opening comparison of its themes to the more familiar outputs of Hebrew-Israeli prose. I Am Your Dust is the first socioliterary investigation of Yiddish-Israeli culture, and it explores how Yiddish-Israeli writers played a vital role in shaping the country's cultural identity in its early years.
Global Gentrifications
Title | Global Gentrifications PDF eBook |
Author | Lees, Loretta |
Publisher | Policy Press |
Pages | 486 |
Release | 2015-01-26 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1447313488 |
This comprehensive book uses a rich array of case studies from cities in Asia, Latin America, Africa, Southern Europe, and beyond to highlight the intensifying global struggle over urban space and underline gentrification as a growing and important battleground in the contemporary world.
The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World
Title | The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World PDF eBook |
Author | Cyrus Schayegh |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Pages | 497 |
Release | 2017-08-28 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0674981103 |
In The Middle East and the Making of the Modern World, Cyrus Schayegh takes up a fundamental problem historians face: how to make sense of the spatial layeredness of the past. He argues that the modern world’s ultimate socio-spatial feature was not the oft-studied processes of globalization or state formation or urbanization. Rather, it was fast-paced, mutually transformative intertwinements of cities, regions, states, and global circuits, a bundle of processes he calls transpatialization. To make this case, Schayegh’s study pivots around Greater Syria (Bilad al-Sham in Arabic), which is roughly coextensive with present-day Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and Israel/Palestine. From this region, Schayegh looks beyond, to imperial and global connections, diaspora communities, and neighboring Egypt, Iraq, and Turkey. And he peers deeply into Bilad al-Sham: at cities and their ties, and at global economic forces, the Ottoman and European empire-states, and the post-Ottoman nation-states at work within the region. He shows how diverse socio-spatial intertwinements unfolded in tandem during a transformative stretch of time, the mid-nineteenth to mid-twentieth centuries, and concludes with a postscript covering the 1940s to 2010s.