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"... [an] intriguing and compelling argument ... an impressive, scholarly and ambitious project of renaming, reoccupying, rewriting the socially constructed silences surrounding the Shoah experience ... [written in a] lucid, poetic, and accessible style."**Women's Studies Review
"I found this book utterly compelling. It is a moving testmony that stands on the cusp of what could be a very different Israeli society in the future."**Nashim, A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies and Gender Issues
"Offering a new and insightful perspective... an impressive, scholarly, and highly recommended contribution to Israeli and Judaic studies."**The Midwest Book Review
"An important book ... that raises several political questions worthy of discussion ... Although the study was written from a sociological point of view, it also includes a wide and well documented discussion of the historiography on the Shoah and its changing role within Israel during the last few decades."**Gesher: Jewish Studies Journal
"This book is the work of a brilliant and courageous scholar who dares to ask her own questions. Its narrative vision, born of ontological urgency is the product of a mature writer at home in her craft."**Ruth Linden
Auteur
Israeli-born Ronit Lentin is a novelist and co-ordinator of the M.Phil. in Ethnic and Racial Studies, Department of Sociology, Trinity College, Dublin. She has published extensively on gender and Shoah commemoration, Israeli and Palestinian women, peace activism, citizenship, and minority Irish women, racism and antisemitism in Irish society, and feminist research methodologies.
Texte du rabat
The murder of a third of Europe's Jews by the Nazis is unquestionably the worst catastrophe in the history of contemporary Judaism and a formative event in the history of Zionism and the State of Israel. Understandably, therefore, the Shoah, written about, analyzed, and given various political interpretations, has shaped public discourse in the history of the State of Israel. The key element of Shoah in the Israeli context is victimhood and as such it has become a source of shame, shrouded in silence and subordinated to the dominant discourse which, resulting from the construction of a "new Hebrew" active subjectivity, taught the postwar generation of Israelis to reject diaspora Jewry and its alleged passivity in the face of catastrophe. This book is the culmination of years of preoccupation with the meaning of the Shoah for the author, an Israeli woman with a "split subjectivity: - that of a daughter of a family of Shoah survivors, and that of a daughter of the first Israeli-born generation; the culmination of her need to break the silence about the Shoah in a society which constructed itself as the Israeli antithesis to diaspora Jewry, and to excavate a "truth" from underneath the mountain of Zionist nation-building myths. These myths, the author argues, not only had deep implication for the formation of her generation but also a profound impact on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Moreover, they are shot through with images of the "masculine" Israeli, constrasted with those of the weak, passive, non-virile Jewish "Other" of the diaspora. This book offers the first gendered analysis of Israeli society and the Shoah. The author employs personal narratives of nine Israeli daughters of Shoah survivors, writers and film makers, and a feminist re-reading of official and unofficial Israeli and Zionist discourses to explore the ways in which the relationship between Israel and the Shoah has been gendered in that the Shoah was "feminized" while Israel was "masculinized." This new perspective has considerable implications for the analysis of Israeli society; a gendered analysis of Israeli construction of nation reveals how the Shoah and Shoah discourse are exploited to justify Israel's, i.e. the "new Hebrew's," self-perceived right of occupation. Israel thus not only negated the Jewish diaspora, but also stigmatized and feminized Shoah victims and survivors, all the while employing Shoah discourses as an excuse for occupation, both in the past and in the present.
Contenu
Acknowledgements
Prologue: If I forget thee
Chapter 1. Introduction: the territories of silence
Chapter 2. 'Writing is the closing of circles'
Chapter 3. Breaking the conspiracy of silence
Chapter 4. Israel's New Hebrews 'memorise' the Jewish Shoah
Chapter 5. Israel's 'second-generation'
Chapter 6. The feminisation of stigma in the relationship between Israelis and Shoah survivors
Chapter 7. Counter-narratives: re-occupying the territories of silence
Epilogue: Journeys end(s)
Bibliography
Index