Research has shown that the presence of children in the Jewish Israeli emigrant family intensifies their ambivalence about living abroad, but encourages greater involvement with fellow Israelis as they seek to transmit a Jewish Israeli identity and maintain their children’s attachment to the Jewish state. This article explores this assumption by focusing on the experiences of mothering of a group of Israeli emigrants in Britain. Based on twelve oral history interviews, it considers the issues of child socialisation and the mothers’ own social life. It traces how the women created a social network within which to mother and how they tried to ensure their children preserved a Jewish Israeli identity. The article also seeks to question how par...
The Israeli State envisions itself as first and foremost a Jewish state. Its founding narrative is t...
The Bene Menashe stem from a number of Christian groups of the Indo-Burmese borderland, some of whom...
This article reflects on the ways in which children of Palestinian exiles born in Poland and the UK ...
Research has shown that the presence of children in the Jewish Israeli emigrant family intensifies t...
This article discusses the significance of religion and religious observance in the lives of the chi...
This article explores the experience of education and employment of young Jewish women from the Gorb...
This article explores the intersection of nationalism and Jewish identity maintenance with High Holi...
This article analyses the life stories of female Jewish refugees and survivors in 1950s Britain in o...
Israeli Identity: Between Orient and Occident is an important book on contemporary Israeli identitie...
This article tests the impact of industrial life, migration and religious ties on family life. Speci...
This feminist ethnographic investigation of the Mothers Circle of Coastal Virginia and the Interfait...
This article explores a question that is often assumed but rarely addressed: What does Israel provid...
Through the utilisation of narrative research and semi-structured interviews this research explores ...
This thesis attends to the major question ‘how is Jewish identity created and maintained in contempo...
Strathclyde theses - ask staff. Thesis no. : T13148This thesis casts new light on the immigrant expe...
The Israeli State envisions itself as first and foremost a Jewish state. Its founding narrative is t...
The Bene Menashe stem from a number of Christian groups of the Indo-Burmese borderland, some of whom...
This article reflects on the ways in which children of Palestinian exiles born in Poland and the UK ...
Research has shown that the presence of children in the Jewish Israeli emigrant family intensifies t...
This article discusses the significance of religion and religious observance in the lives of the chi...
This article explores the experience of education and employment of young Jewish women from the Gorb...
This article explores the intersection of nationalism and Jewish identity maintenance with High Holi...
This article analyses the life stories of female Jewish refugees and survivors in 1950s Britain in o...
Israeli Identity: Between Orient and Occident is an important book on contemporary Israeli identitie...
This article tests the impact of industrial life, migration and religious ties on family life. Speci...
This feminist ethnographic investigation of the Mothers Circle of Coastal Virginia and the Interfait...
This article explores a question that is often assumed but rarely addressed: What does Israel provid...
Through the utilisation of narrative research and semi-structured interviews this research explores ...
This thesis attends to the major question ‘how is Jewish identity created and maintained in contempo...
Strathclyde theses - ask staff. Thesis no. : T13148This thesis casts new light on the immigrant expe...
The Israeli State envisions itself as first and foremost a Jewish state. Its founding narrative is t...
The Bene Menashe stem from a number of Christian groups of the Indo-Burmese borderland, some of whom...
This article reflects on the ways in which children of Palestinian exiles born in Poland and the UK ...