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Full-Text Articles in Jewish Studies

"Identity Imperative: Ottoman Jews In Wartime And Interwar Britain", Aviva Ben-Ur Apr 2014

"Identity Imperative: Ottoman Jews In Wartime And Interwar Britain", Aviva Ben-Ur

Aviva Ben-Ur

By the onset of World War I, hundreds of Ottoman immigrants, including a significant proportion of Jews, were living and trading in Britain. During wartime and through much of the interwar period, these multi-ethnic Ottomans were automatically classified as enemy aliens, subject at times to internment and deportation, stripped of their freedom of movement, and uniformly barred from citizenship. Drawing on nearly sixty recently declassified naturalization applications of Ottoman Jews, this article discusses the prosopography of Middle Eastern newcomers, nativism and xenophobia, and the role of the state in shaping national and ethnic identities, focusing on the British government’s invention …


“Atlantic Jewish History: A Conceptual Reorientation”, Aviva Ben-Ur Dec 2013

“Atlantic Jewish History: A Conceptual Reorientation”, Aviva Ben-Ur

Aviva Ben-Ur

This chapter explores the radical implications of an Atlantic perspective on American Jewish history, based on an analysis of select primary sources from The Arnold and Deanne Kaplan Collection of Early American Judaica, housed at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries. Such an Atlantic perspective allows us to revise the national interpretation of “American” Jewish history, commonly taken to mean the United States, reminding us of its plural hemispheric meaning (Americas) and allowing us to envision an Atlantic Jewish world connecting four continents: Europe, Africa, South and North America. Adopting a chronological-thematic approach, this chapter identifies three key areas for analysis: …


Ben-Ur, %22when Spanish Is No Longer A Jewish Language%22.Pdf, Aviva Ben-Ur Dec 2013

Ben-Ur, %22when Spanish Is No Longer A Jewish Language%22.Pdf, Aviva Ben-Ur

Aviva Ben-Ur

This is a translation (improved thanks to the feedback of Julia Phillips Cohen) of a 1928 installment of the popular advice column "Postemas de Mujer," published in the U.S. Ladino newspaper La Vara by the Salonikan-born journalist Moïse Soulam, who wrote under the pen name of Bula Satula. The installment demonstrate that Ladino and Spanish were for the most part mutually intelligible languages, but Sephardim did not always welcome the overtures of the Puerto Ricans who overheard their conversations. This translation previously appeared in Aviva Ben-Ur, "We Speak and Write This Language Against Our Will’: Jews, Hispanics, and the Dilemma …