Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:2041Hits:19230022Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID113025
Title ProperZionist awareness of the Jewish past
Other Title Informationinventing tradition or renewing the ethnic past?
LanguageENG
AuthorConforti, Yitzhak
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Since the 1980s, the question of how nations are formed has been the topic of historiographic debate: is it correct to define nation-building in terms of inventing traditions, or is the ethnic-symbolic viewpoint more useful in understanding the process of development of the nation-state? This debate is also reflected in research on Jewish nationalism. In this article, I will examine this issue in relation to the Zionist movement, focusing on several clear examples of forging the nation and nation-building: 1) the change in configuration of traditional Jewish holidays; 2) ceremonies and Zionist holidays on kibbutzim; 3) the status of the Bible in the Zionist movement; and 4) Jewish history and Zionist historiography. These examples indicate that the process of nation-building reveals a strong ethnic-cultural link to the Jewish past. I will argue that modern political explanations such as inventing tradition do not offer a full explanation of the phenomenon of Jewish nationalism. In order to arrive at a comprehensive understanding of the success of Zionism in consolidating around it a group willing to commit such a high level of personal sacrifice over time, we must give consideration to cultural-ethnic continuity as well as the feeling of commitment and sanctity that Jewish nationalism offered to its believers, both religious and secular.
`In' analytical NoteStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 12, No.1; 2012: p.155-171
Journal SourceStudies in Ethnicity and Nationalism Vol. 12, No.1; 2012: p.155-171
Key WordsZionist Awareness ;  Jewish Past ;  Ethnic Past ;  Jewish Nationalism ;  Zionism ;  Zionist Movement