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When Sonia Met Boris: An Oral History of Jewish Life under Stalin: Oxford Oral History Series

Autor Anna Shternshis
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 mar 2017
Russian-speaking Jews from the former Soviet Union are a peculiarity in the Jewish world. After decades living in a repressive, nominally atheistic state, these Jews did manage to retain a strong sense of Jewish identity--but one that was almost completely divorced from Judaism. Today, more than ten percent of Jews speak or understand Russian, signaling the importance of an ever-vexing question: why are Russian Jews the way they are? In pursuit of an answer, Anna Shternshis's groundbreaking When Sonia Met Boris draws on nearly 500 oral history interviews on the Soviet Jewish experience with Soviet citizens who were adults by the 1940s. Soviet Jews lived through tumultuous times: the Great Terror, World War II, the anti-Semitic policies of the postwar period, and the collapse of the Soviet Union. But like millions of other Soviet citizens, they married, raised children, and built careers, pursuing life as best as they could in a profoundly hostile environment. One of the first scholars to record and analyze oral testimonies of Soviet Jews, Shternshis unearths heartbreaking, deeply poignant, and often funny stories of the everyday choices Jews were forced to make as a repressed minority living in a totalitarian regime. Shternshis reveals how ethnicity rapidly transformed into a disability, as well as a negative characteristic, for Soviet Jews in the postwar period. That sense of Jewish identity has persisted well into the twenty-first century, influencing the children and grandchildren of Shternshis's subjects, the foundational generation of contemporary Russian Jewish culture. An illuminating work of social and cultural history, When Sonia Met Boris traces the fascinating contours of contemporary Russian Jewish identity back to their very roots.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190223106
ISBN-10: 0190223103
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Oral History Series

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

...this is a very usable and useful book for teaching courses on not only Soviet-Jewish history and anthropology, but for broader insight into innovative approaches toward Soviet nationalities studies.
[T]he overall contribution of the book [is]...significant....[S]uch a study sits well alongside existing literature on everyday Stalinism, and with its focus on both Jewish domestic and work life offers a substantial contribution to this area....[T]he book will be a valuable resource for those who research and teach in the area of modern Russian, eastern European and Jewish studies.
The study makes a valuable contribution to the growing literature in Soviet oral history on everyday experiences of the Stalinist regime and of Soviet Jewry ... a very readable book
an important effort at "disambiguating" the Soviet Jewish experience for a western audience. It will be a particular useful teaching tool for courses that focus on the anthropology of Jews, on Soviet/post-Soviet studies, and on the methods of oral history.
This page-turning, concise volume makes excellent use of oral histories to add flesh to an otherwise linear narrative of the Jewish experience in the Soviet Union and goes beyond to show how those experiences shaped the trajectories of the people who lived through not just the major historical events but also less eventful and at times mundane individual histories of their own lives.

Notă biografică

Anna Shternshis is Al and Malka Green Associate Professor in Yiddish Language and Literature at the University of Toronto. She is the author of Soviet and Kosher: Jewish Popular Culture in the Soviet Union, 1923 - 1939 (2006) and more than twenty articles on the Soviet Jewish experience during World War II, Russian Jewish culture, and the post-Soviet Jewish diaspora.