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INTEGRATION
AND DISTINCTIVENESS IN MULTICULTURAL SETTINGS: THE VARIETY OF JEWISH IDENTITIES
IN EASTERN AND EAST-CENTRAL EUROPE, 1700-1989
6-24 July, 1998
Course Directors:
Michael
K. Silber (Hebrew University, Israel)
Hillel Kieval (University of Washington, USA)
Resource Persons:
Immanuel
Etkes (Hebrew University, Israel)
Israel Bartal (Hebrew University, Israel)
Michael Stanislawski (Columbia University, USA)
Rashid Kaplanov (Jewish University in Moscow)
Ezra Mendelsohn (Hebrew University, Israel)
Jonathan Frankel (Hebrew University, Israel)
András Kovács (ELTE, Hungary)
Course Description
As a dispersed minority, two basic issues
confronted Jews in the modern era: achieving integration into their host
societies and maintaining a meaningful and flourishing Jewish identity
and culture. These two goals were often seen as part of a zero-sum game
where universal principles underpinning integration were seen as eroding
the particular Jewish identity and its cultural and political expressions.
In the emancipating host societies and states in the West, integration
was often coupled with demands for conformity, and the legitimacy of preserving
a particularistic culture and identity was often called into
question. But what of the eastern lands?
During most of the modern period, the
majority of world Jewry lived on the territories of the Russian and Habsburg
empires and their successor states, a very heterogeneous region with great
national and religious diversity, however, one that could not be characterized
as very liberal. What implications did this have for both integration into
the host societies as well as the preservation of Jewish distinctiveness
and particular collective identity?
To the predicament that Jews found themselves
in there was no one solution. An impressive spectrum of ideologies sought
to resolve the tensions between integration and distinctiveness. Above
all, it was an arena where every solution was sharply challenged and contested,
creating in practice a wide variety of Jewish identities in the different
lands of eastern and east-central Europe.
With these themes in mind, we will explore
the history of the Jews in the Russian and Habsburg Empires, as well as
the "nation-states" that succeeded them after World War I, up until the
collapse of communism. At times the two empires posed an interesting contrast
to each other as well as to the nation-states in the West. But at other
times there were surprising convergences.
This graduate level course seeks to present
an up to date synthesis of the last few decades of scholarship in modern
eastern european Jewish history by some of the outstanding authorities
in the field.
The course will be divided roughly into
three parts, each a week long. The first part will introduce the setting,
dealing with the most important religious, cultural and political developments
in the Polish Kingdom and later in the Russian Empire, from enlightened
absolutism up until 1880. The successes and failures of integration by
the state, society and the nationalist movements, will be explored alongside
the powerful polemics over these issues as well as the sharp fissures that
made their appearance within the Jewish community, with the rise of the
new Hasidic movement, its opponents (Mitnagdim), the Musar
movement, and the Haskala (Jewish Enlightenment).
The second week is devoted to the history
of the Jews of the Habsburg empire from the enlightened absolutism of Joseph
II to the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy at the end of World
War I. Here the Kulturkampf between the Orthodox and the reformers over
the desirability of integration and the limits of Jewish distinctiveness
will be much sharper than in both eastern and western Europe. The role
of nationalism as well as the rise of modern antisemitism will be central
issues, as well as the explosion of Jewish creativity in the major urban
centers of the empire.
The third week is devoted mainly to developments
in the interwar and the postwar periods. Modern Jewish politics arose in
Russia at the end of the nineteenth century when Jewish nationalism and
socialism sprouted a bewildering array of political parties and ideologies
each with its own peculiar solution to the twin problems of universal integration
and particular distinctiveness. The first World War proved to be a crucial
watershed in the history of the Jews both in the Soviet Union and in the
new successor states of east-central Europe. The new conditions presented
new opportunities and constraints to the perennial choices
facing modern Jewry. The course
concludes by bringing the narrative up to our very day.
Course Calendar
I. Eastern European Jewry, 1700-1880
(6 to 19 July)
Introduction (Silber)
1. The Hasidic Movement: The Besht,
the Founder of Hasidism, and his Circle
(Etkes)
2. From an Esoteric Circle to a Popular
Movement, 1760-1815 (Etkes)
3. Opposition to Hasidism: The Gaon
of Vilna and R. Hayyim of Volozhin (Etkes)
4. The Musar Movement and the Lithuanian
Yeshiva in the Nineteenth Century
(Etkes)
5. The Galician Haskala (Bartal)
6. Jews and Poles (Bartal)
7. Creation of Modern Hebrew and Yiddish
Culture (Bartal)
8. The Beginnings of Jewish Nationalism (Bartal)
9. The Russian State and the Jews, 1772-1855 (Stanislawski)
10. The Russian Haskalah (Stanislawski)
11. Jews and the Great Reforms (Stanislawski)
12. Creation of a Russian-Jewish Culture,
1850-1917 (Stanislawski)
13. Non-Ashkenasi Jews in European Russia
18th to 20th centuries (Kaplanov)
Other activities
9 July late afternoon: Mini-conference
1: students' presentations
12 July: Field trip 1: the Jewish Museum
and Jewish Archives (Silber)
II. Habsburg Jewry, 1780-1920 (13
to 17 July)
14. The Reforms of Enlightened Absolutism
under Joseph II, 1780-1790 (Silber)
15. Haskala, Reform and Orthodoxy, 1780-1840 (Silber)
16. Nationalism and Revolution, 1825-1850 (Silber)
17. Religious Kulturkampf and Emancipation,
1840-1870 (Silber)
18. Ethnic Conflict and Secondary Acculturation (Kieval)
19. Antisemitism, 1880-1914 (Kieval)
20. Varieties of Jewish Nationalism,
1880-1918 (Kieval)
21. Fin-de-siecle urban culture (Kieval)
Other activities
19July: Field trip 2: Jewish Budapest (Silber)
III. Eastern and East-Central European
Jewry, 1880's-WW II (20 to 24 July)
22. Jews and other Minorities in Interwar
East Central Europe (Mendelsohn)
23. Jewish Politics in Interwar East
Central Europe (Mendelsohn)
24. The Jews in East Central Europe:
Integration, Acculturation, Assimilation,
Nationalization (Mendelsohn)
25. The Jews of Interwar East Central
Europe: Historiography and Competing
Narratives (Mendelsohn)
26. 1881 and the Development of Modern
Jewish Politics until the First World War
(Frankel)
27. War, Revolutions and the Transformation
of the Jews, 1914-1927 (Frankel)
28. Jews under the Regime of Stalin,
1928-1953 (Frankel)
29. Eastern European Jews in the Post-Stalin
Era, 1953-1998 (Frankel)
30. The Jews in Hungary in the Post-War
era (Kovcs)
Conclusion
Other activities
22 July late afternoon: Mini-conference
2: students' presentations
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