The Other as Brother: Nation-Building and Ethnic Ambivalence in Early Jewish-Israeli Anthropology

Most depictions of "peripheral," nation-states' anthropologies assume that the anthropology's Other is a given, pre-defined subordinated group. Using the beginnings of Israeli anthropology (1960s-1970s) as our case study, we explore instead how while appropriating academic domina...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAnthropological quarterly Vol. 82; no. 2; pp. 477 - 508
Main Authors Goodman, Yehuda, Loss, Joseph
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, DC George Washington University Institute for Ethnographic Research 01.04.2009
Washington University Institute for Ethnology Research
Institute for Ethnographic Research
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ISSN0003-5491
1534-1518
1534-1518
DOI10.1353/anq.0.0062

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Summary:Most depictions of "peripheral," nation-states' anthropologies assume that the anthropology's Other is a given, pre-defined subordinated group. Using the beginnings of Israeli anthropology (1960s-1970s) as our case study, we explore instead how while appropriating academic dominant paradigms of the time and aspiring to national unity, Israeli anthropologists were articulating through their choices of research subjects and research topics, and through their interpretations of the field an ethnic difference between themselves, European Jews and their "brothers," Oriental Jews. We follow the ambivalent discursive strategies through which this research project was created, and explore its implications for understanding other nation-building anthropologies.
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ISSN:0003-5491
1534-1518
1534-1518
DOI:10.1353/anq.0.0062