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ID084378
Title ProperWas the east less rational than the west
Other Title Informationthe meaning of "nation" for Russian Zionism in its "imagined context"
LanguageENG
AuthorTsurumi, Taro
Publication2008.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines the early phase of Russian Zionism in the context of the Russian Empire, which was neither a nation-state nor a frontier of Western modernity, and suggests that we can understand what is termed as "ethnic nationalism" only within its own context, including the "imagined" context of its emissaries. Russian Zionism paradoxically started as an attempt to reintegrate Jews into the Empire; thus, it derived its meaning from the assumption of the multinational social order of the Empire. Western Zionism, which emerged in another context, attempted to co-opt Russian Zionism when the latter highlighted the strength of its ethnicity as compared to Western Jew in order to counter the former's modernistic scheme.
`In' analytical NoteNationalism and Ethnic Politics Vol. 14, No. 3; Jul - Sep 2008: p 361-394
Journal SourceNationalism and Ethnic Politics Vol. 14, No. 3; Jul - Sep 2008: p 361-394
Key WordsRussian Zionism ;  Rusian Empire ;  Jews - Russia ;  Western Zionism ;  Europe - Jewish Society ;  Counterculture - West Europe Jews