Sweet Burdens: Welfare and Communality among Russian Jews in Germany

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State University of New York Press, Apr 15, 2015 - Social Science - 246 pages
Sweet Burdens presents a detailed ethnographic study of the lives of Russian-Jewish immigrants in Germany over the past twenty years. Focusing on the first generation of adult immigrants, Sveta Roberman examines how they question and negotiate their moral economy and civic culture vis-à-vis the host German state and society, on the one hand, and the Holocaust past, on the other. She approaches the immigrant-host encounter as one of many cycles of social exchanges taking place in multiple and diverse arenas. The book sheds light on a number of issues, including the moral economy of Jewish-German relations, immigrants' performances of civics and citizenship, modes of inclusion and exclusion, consumption and consumerism, work and the phenomena of unemployment and underemployment, the concept of community, and the dynamics and difficulties of reinventing Jewish identity and tradition.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Part I Spaces of Consumption
25
Part II Work and Employment
77
Part III Reinventing Tradition
131
Conclusion
183
Notes
193
References
203
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About the author (2015)

Sveta Roberman>a research fellow at the Research Institute for Innovation in Education at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and also a lecturer at the Gordon College of Education in Haifa.

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