My dissertation addresses the sociocultural processes which contribute to the construction of ethnocultural identity among Zagrebian Jews. I argue, contrary to the often essentialized perception of Jewish identity imposed by e.g. the Croatian government and Jewish international organizations, that Jewish identity in Zagreb is actively chosen in ways that are both idiosyncratic and contingent upon the surrounding sociocultural environment. At the heart of my argument is an appeal to the dynamic and contextual nature of identity negotiation, and the influence this has on the maintenance and survival of the Zagrebian Jewish community. In support of this, I have employed ethnographic methods to assess (i) the ways in which Jewish identity is ne...
This dissertation examines how Jews constructed and articulated their self-identification in Berlin,...
This dissertation examines the successful merging of two highly divergent and developed historical a...
This thesis, based on fourteen months of ethnographic fieldwork, examines the entanglement of kinsh...
The present study focuses on the way in which Zagreb Jews make sense of themselves and their world. ...
This paper has two aims. To begin, it examines whether the symbolic ethnicity model is relevant to i...
The present study focuses on the way in which Zagreb Jews make sense of themselves and their world. ...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This thesis is based on a long-term field research in the Prague Jewish community in which I am tryi...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This PhD thesis focuses on the creation and maintenance of the liberal Jewish community in present d...
Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, millions of East European Jews made the d...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This bachelor thesis "Fieldwork in the Jewish community in Prague" is concerned with the social iden...
89 7. RESUMÉ The thesis is focused on the life of Jewish community in Prague, on the background of p...
This dissertation examines evolving concepts of religious and ethnic identity among Bukharan Jews in...
This dissertation examines how Jews constructed and articulated their self-identification in Berlin,...
This dissertation examines the successful merging of two highly divergent and developed historical a...
This thesis, based on fourteen months of ethnographic fieldwork, examines the entanglement of kinsh...
The present study focuses on the way in which Zagreb Jews make sense of themselves and their world. ...
This paper has two aims. To begin, it examines whether the symbolic ethnicity model is relevant to i...
The present study focuses on the way in which Zagreb Jews make sense of themselves and their world. ...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This thesis is based on a long-term field research in the Prague Jewish community in which I am tryi...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This PhD thesis focuses on the creation and maintenance of the liberal Jewish community in present d...
Over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, millions of East European Jews made the d...
This study investigates the process of Jewish communal rebuilding in Yugoslavia after the Holocaust....
This bachelor thesis "Fieldwork in the Jewish community in Prague" is concerned with the social iden...
89 7. RESUMÉ The thesis is focused on the life of Jewish community in Prague, on the background of p...
This dissertation examines evolving concepts of religious and ethnic identity among Bukharan Jews in...
This dissertation examines how Jews constructed and articulated their self-identification in Berlin,...
This dissertation examines the successful merging of two highly divergent and developed historical a...
This thesis, based on fourteen months of ethnographic fieldwork, examines the entanglement of kinsh...