This innovative exploration of Jewish experiences in France and the Francophone world through nuanced questions and representations offers an intertwining of perspectives that challenge geographical, chronological, and theoretical boundaries.
Engaging the transnational, it brings together studies highlighting the importance of migration, diaspora, identity, and empire for Jewish communities in metropolitan France and beyond. New and emerging scholars are invited into conversation with established thinkers to capture the present and future of French, Francophone, and Jewish Studies. Because identities are layered and multifaceted, the multidisciplinary studies in this volume are intended to illustrate how frameworks interact, overlap, and shift. The result of these efforts is a collection of essays that reveals the complex interplay between French and Jewish identities and how they have changed over time. Grounded in historical, literary, visual, sociological, and legal analyses, they delve into questions of gender, race, religion, empire, migration, culture, and communal life. Taken together, they problematize the categories often created to make meaning of complex dynamics.
This book is an important secondary source for researchers, undergraduate and graduate students, and general readers interested in world history, Jewish Studies, French Studies, European Studies, and immigration and diaspora studies.
This innovative exploration of various Jewish experiences in France and the Francophone world through nuanced questions and representations offers an intertwining of perspectives that challenge geographical, chronological, and theoretical boundaries.
Introduction: The Varied Jewish Ideas of France Part I: Identities
1.
They Are the Smart Set: Female Society Portraiture and Jewish Class
Aspirations in Nineteenth-Century France
2. Les angles morts de
luniversalisme: Whiteness and Jewishness in Adolphe Crémieuxs Legal
Writings
3. Fascism and Antifascism: North African Jews and French Republican
Values in the 1930s
4. Beyond a Jewish Colonial Fracture: Assimilation and
Persecution in Roger Ikor and Albert Memmis 1955 Novels
5. French Jewry
Confronts the Separation of Church and State: Challenges and Opportunities
6.
Franco-Judaism: Diverse, in Flux, and Transnational Part II: Movements
7.
Defying the Soviet Regime, Embracing the French Republic: Jewish-Russian
Émigrés Publishing Activities in Interwar France
8. Undesirables in
France: Ilse Bing, Luise Straus-Ernst, and German-Jewish Women During the
Second World War
9. Mediterranean Crossings: Egyptian Jews and France
10.
Mediating Migration, Brokering Belonging: The Moroccan Alliance Israélite
Universelle Teachers Union, 19431964
11. The Politics of the Arab-Jew:
Colonial Histories and Postcolonial Futures in North African Jewish Writing
of the 1980s
Meredith Scott is an Associate Professor of History at the US Air Force Academy, where she teaches European history, genocide, the Holocaust, and global history. Her book The Lifeline: Salomon Grumbach and the Quest for Safety (2022) examines interwar Jewish activism in the realms of human rights, refugees, and democracy.
Nick Underwood is an Assistant Professor of History and the Neilsen-Berger Chair of Judaic Studies at The College of Idaho. He has written widely on topics related to Yiddish culture in twentieth-century France, including his first book, Yiddish Paris: Staging Nation and Community in Interwar France (2022; National Jewish Book Award finalist).