To what extent did English society of the late nineteenth century accept or reject its Jewish minority? How did the Jews' religious, communal, and political identities develop in the context of English life? What was the impact of Jewish emigration from Eastern Europe to England? How did these immigrants fare within the English economy?This book presents an important new perspective on Jews in England and English attitudes toward Jews during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It investigates the history of Jewish integration more rigorously than any previous study and reveals that, despite legal freedoms, cultural and political antipathy to Jews was far greater than has been assumed.Drawing on a wide range of source materials in both English and Yiddish, David Feldman discusses arguments between Whigs and Tories over Jewish emancipation; anti-Semitic assaults on Disraeli; the turbulent political life of the Jewish East End of London; and the travails of the immigrant sweatshop workers. By exposing the fractions and divided nature of the Jewish working-class community, and by pointing up similarities to non-Jewish working-class communities, Feldman's analysis overturns the conventional interpretation of growing homogenization of the wider working-class around 1900. The book therefore has a threefold importance: it is a major contribution to the debate about Victorian liberalism; it adds to the discussion of class and community in pre-1914 English society; and it goes well beyond all previous social histories of the Jewish experience in London to reveal both the limitations and achievement of Jewish integration there in the years before the First World War.
Les mer
An account of the history of Jewish immigrants in London and of Britains response to them. The book investigates the reality of Jewish assimilation and reveals that despite the legal freedoms, cultural and political antipathy to Jews was far greater than assumed, and their integration a fiction.
Les mer
PART 1 JEWS AND THE NATION, 1840-80: 1 Jewish Emancipation and Political Argument in Early Victorian England; 2 Rabbinism, Popery and Reform; 3 Dimensions of Difference; 4 Disraeli, Jews and the English Question; 5 The Contradictions of Emancipated Jewry. PART 2 IMMIGRANTS AND WORKERS, 1880-1914: 6 Emigration and the Jewish Working Class; 7 The Impact of Immigration; 8 The Structure of Industry in the Jewish East End; 9 Organized Labour; 10 Unorganized Labour. PART 3: 11 Immigration, Social Policy and Politics; 12 English Jews and the Problems of Immigration; 13 Association and Communal Politics; 14 The Politics of Anglicisation; 15 The State, the Nation and Jewish Politics.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780300055016
Publisert
1994-05-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Yale University Press
Vekt
916 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
416

Forfatter