After the rescue : Jewish identity and community in contemporary Denmark by Buckser, Andrew, 1964- instant download
xi, 271 pages ; 23 cm, In October of 1943, the Danish resistance rescued almost all of the Jews in Copenhagen from roundups by the occupying Nazis. In the years since, Jews have become deeply engaged in a Danish culture that presents very few barriers of anti-Semitism or prejudice. This telling ethnographic study explores the questions that such inclusion raises for the Danish Jews, and what their answers can tell us about the meaning of religion, ethnicity, and community in modern society. Social scientists have long argued that modernity poses challenges to traditional ethnic communities, by breaking down the networks of locality, kinship, religion and occupation that have held such communities together. For Danish Jews, inclusion into the larger society has led to increasing fragmentation, as the community has split into a bewlidering array of religious, social, and political factions. The community's persistent vitality in the face of such fragmentation, and the ongoing importance of Jewishness to the self-identity of its members, points to a new understanding of the meaning of ethnic community in contemporary society. --Publisher description, Includes bibliographical references (pages 253-264) and index, The community in time -- The religious world : faith and ritual practice in Jewish Copenhagen -- The communal world : Jewish subgroups in Copenhagen -- The social world : the life and politics of the formal Jewish community -- The larger world : relations with the Jewish community outside Denmark -- The Danish world : Jewish difference in Danish culture -- The world of the past : Jewish identities and the rescue of 1943 -- Conclusion : the future of Danish Jewry and the anthropological study of community
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