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NATHAN ALTERMAN (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   183983


Generational crossover: ‘the Movement for the Entire Land of Israel’ from the Labour movement to Gush Emunim / Goldstein, Amir; Shilo, Elchanan   Journal Article
Goldstein, Amir Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The ‘Movement for the Entire Land of Israel’, was formed by activist members of the Labour movement shortly after the June 1967 war. Its founders struggle for “Greater Israel” and espoused the establishment of settlements that would secure the Israeli hold on the territories occupied during the war. During the 1970s, however, the movement had effectively come to be spearheaded by Gush Emunim (Bloc of the Faithful), a newly-created religious-nationalist activist group. This article describes this transition while examining the factors that enabled this process despite the two groups’ very different political, social, cultural ideals and intergenerational backgrounds.
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2
ID:   131858


Hegemony inside and out: Nathan Alterman and the Israeli Arabs / Oppenheimer, Yochai   Journal Article
Oppenheimer, Yochai Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article examines the political protest expressed by Nathan Alterman over the years in poems published in the newspapers. It argues that this criticism identifies with the hegemonic political values rather than articulate alternative ones, in an attempt to nurture self-criticism on the part of the government regarding its failures and mistakes. This type of criticism seeks to preserve the reigning hegemony from within and to ensure that it projects an image of moral rectitude.
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3
ID:   131856


Image of the 'living-dead' in Nathan Alterman's poetry: from archetype to national symbol / Bartana, Ortsion   Journal Article
Bartana, Ortsion Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This article traces the motif of the living-dead in Nathan Alterman's poetry, beginning with Stars Outside and through Ten Plagues of Egypt to The City of the Dove, indicating the way in which Alterman's literary-symbolic structure was gradually replaced by a historical-literary one that reflects the influence of historical events - the two world wars, the Holocaust, and the War of Independence. With the wiping out of Jewish existence and literature, the Jewish hero became the Jewish victim and national symbol who in sacrificing himself ensured the life of the nation.
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