Embodying Hebrew Culture
Aesthetics, Athletics, and Dance in the Jewish Community of Mandate Palestine
Nina S. Spiegel
Award WinnerCultural Studies, Dance, History, Israel and Middle East, Jewish Studies, Performance Studies
Paperback
ISBN: 9780814348031
Pages: 256 Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 47 b&w illus.
Hardcover
ISBN: 9780814336366
Pages: 256 Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 47 b&w illus.
eBOOK
ISBN: 9780814336373
Review
Spiegel provides a clear, concise and comprehensive guide to that fascinating period of ferment and ingenuity.
— Yaron Peleg
From their conquest of Palestine in 1917 during World War I, until the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, the British controlled the territory by mandate, representing a distinct cultural period in Middle Eastern history. In Embodying Hebrew Culture: Aesthetics, Athletics, and Dance in the Jewish Community of Mandate Palestine, author Nina S. Spiegel argues that the Jewish community of this era created enduring social, political, religious, and cultural forms through public events, such as festivals, performances, and celebrations. She finds that the physical character of this national public culture represents one of the key innovations of Zionism-embedding the importance of the corporeal into national Jewish life-and remains a significant feature of contemporary Israeli culture.
Spiegel analyzes four significant events in this period that have either been unexplored or underexplored: the beauty competitions for Queen Esther in conjunction with the Purim carnivals in Tel Aviv from 1926 to 1929, the first Maccabiah Games or "Jewish Olympics" in Tel Aviv in 1932, the National Dance Competition for theatrical dance in Tel Aviv in 1937, and the Dalia Folk Dance Festivals at Kibbutz Dalia in 1944 and 1947. Drawing on a vast assortment of archives throughout Israel, Spiegel uses an array of untapped primary sources, from written documents to visual and oral materials, including films, photographs, posters, and interviews. Methodologically, Spiegel offers an original approach, integrating the fields of Israel studies, modern Jewish history, cultural history, gender studies, performance studies, dance theory and history, and sports studies.
In this detailed, multi-disciplinary volume, Spiegel demonstrates the ways that political and social issues can influence a new society and provides a dynamic framework for interpreting present-day Israeli culture. Students and teachers of Israel studies, performance studies, and Jewish cultural history will appreciate Embodying Hebrew Culture.
Through the prism of beauty, dance, and the first Maccabiah, core ideological struggles are revealed for the emergent cultural themes in Mandatory Palestine and continuing in Israeli society. Anchored in interdisciplinary perspectives, Dr. Spiegel weaves together an original, fascinating, and insightful story of the social and cultural life of the Yishuv.
– Calvin Goldscheider, professor emeritus of sociology and Ungerleider Professor Emeritus of Judaic Studies, Brown University
This is a book that I have wanted to read for a long time. Nina Spiegel demonstrates how British-Mandate Palestine constructed a public culture premised on corporeality and how new forms of folk dance, theatrical dance, sport, and festival embodied the tensions and debates of an emerging nation-one poised between past and present, East and West, sorrow and celebration. Embodying Hebrew Culture enriches and amplifies our understanding of performance and politics in twentieth-century culture.
– Susan Manning, Northwestern University
[This] book offers a significant contribution to the understanding of the richness and diversity of perfonnative culture in Mandatory Palestine. [It] shed[s] light on the interconnections and interactions within the field of the performing arts, along with its social, cultural, and aesthetic aspects.
– Shelly Zer-Zion, Tel Aviv University, Journal of Israeli History
Spiegel provides a clear, concise and comprehensive guide to that fascinating period of ferment and ingenuity.
– Yaron Peleg
By focusing on three of the major cultural innovations of early Zionism-beauty contests, sports, and dance-Nina S. Spiegel provides a clear, concise, and comprehensive guide to that fascinating period of ferment and ingenuity: the attempt to rejuvenate Jewish culture according to the tenets of European nationalism and resurrect it anew in the Land of Israel in the first half of the twentieth century.
– Yaron Peleg, Kennedy-Leigh Lecturer in Modern Hebrew Studies, University of Cambridge
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2013 National Jewish Book Award - Result: Finalist in the category of Writing Based on Archival Material
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2014 Sami Rohr Prize from the Jewish Book Council - Result: Finalist