Palgrave studies in nineteenth-century writing and culture
INTERNAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES/INDEXES NOTE
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 221-233) and index.
CONTENTS NOTE
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Jews and jewels: a symbolic economy on the South African diamond fields / Adrienne Munich -- Little Jew boys made good: immigration, the South African war, and Anglo-Jewish fiction / Nadia Valman -- Acting like an alien: "civil" antisemitism, the rhetoricized Jew, and early twentieth-century British immigration law / Lara Trubowitz -- Commerce, state, and anti-alienism: balancing Britain's interests in the late-Victorian period / Nick Evans -- The ghosts of Kishinev in the East End: responses to a pogrom in the Jewish London of 1903 / Ben Gidley -- Jews, Englishmen, and folklorists: the scholarship of Joseph Jacobs and Moses Gaster / Simon Rabinovitch -- Imperial Zion: Israel Zangwill and the English origins of territorialism / David Glover -- Zionism, territorialism, race, and nation in the thought and politics of Israel Zangwill / Meri-Jane Rochelson -- By whom shall she arise? for she is small: the Wales-Israel tradition in the Edwardian period / Jasmine Donahaye -- Spying out the land: the Zionist expedition to East Africa, 1905 / Eitan Bar-Yosef -- Herzl, the scramble, and a meeting that never happened: revisiting the notion of an African Zion / Mark Levene.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
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"'The Jew', widely recognized in recent scholarship as a potent symbol of debates about modernity, became a particularly charged figure during the late-Victorian and Edwardian years, a period that witnessed the mass migration of East European Jews to Britain, the South African War (1899-1902), the proposal to establish a Jewish colony in East Africa (1903), and the introduction of the Aliens Act (1905). In these turbulent years, 'the Jew' was imagined as both black and white, infinitely wealthy and yet abjectly poor, refusing to assimilate and yet assuming a 'false' English identity, ideal colonizer and undesirable immigrant, 'alien' and yet almost overly familiar." "While attempts to account for these contradictions have all but ignored the crucial reference point of the Empire, this innovative and interdisciplinary volume considers the projection of the figure of 'the Jew' onto a vast geographical grid - not only the East/West divide within the British metropolitan centre, but also the much wider colonial context, shifting between Britain, Africa, and Palestine. Exploring links between Zionist culture and the British imperial experience, essays in this collection suggest how the methods of postcolonial criticism may be applied both to modern Jewish perceptions of territory and nation and to the image of 'the Jew' in the British political imagination."--Jacket.
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Jewish literature-- Great Britain-- History and criticism.