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Informationen zum Autor Tony Kushner is Professor in History and director of the Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations at the University of Southampton Klappentext Anglo-Jewry since 1066: Place, locality and memory is a study of the history and memory of Anglo-Jewry from medieval times to the present and is the first to explore the construction of identities, both Jewish and non-Jewish, in relation to the concept of place. The introductory chapters provide a theoretical overview focusing on the nature of local studies then moves into a chronological frame, starting with medieval Winchester, moving to early modern Portsmouth and then chapters covering the evolution of Anglo-Jewry from emancipation to the twentieth century. Emphasis is placed on the impact on identities resulting from the complex relationship between migration (including transmigration) and settlement of minority groups. Drawing upon a wide range of approaches, including history, cultural and literary studies, geography, Jewish and ethnic and racial studies, Kushner uses extensive sources including novels, poems, art, travel literature, autobiographical writing, official documentation, newspapers and census data. This book will appeal to scholars interested in Jewish studies and British history Zusammenfassung This is a study of the history and memory of Anglo-Jewry from medieval to the present. The particular focus is on the relationship between the local (in this case Hampshire), the national and the global. -- . Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface and Acknowledgments1. Placing the 'local'2. Wessex tales/Yiddisher spiels3. Winchester: Constructing the city of memories4. Point of contestation: Jews in Portsmouth during the long eighteenth century5. Jewish emancipation and after: Locality, brotherhood and the nature of tolerance6. Settlement and migration from the 1850s to 19147. Historicizing the invisible: Transmigrancy, memory and local identities8. Memory at the margins, matter out of place: Hidden narratives of jewish settlement and movement in the interwar yearsConclusionIndex...