Jewish Portraits, Indian Frames
Jewish Portraits, Indian Frames
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Reveals the forgotten history of Baghdadi Jews’ journey into India through the stories of four generations of Jewish women.
An invaluable cultural document shaped from personal experience, Jewish Portraits, Indian Frames explores the fascinating social and cultural history of Baghdadi Jewish women in Calcutta, India. Through the lives of her foremothers over four generations, Jael Silliman discovers how they ‘dwelled in travelling’ despite being widely dispersed across Asia, which created a moving geography of Baghdadi Jewish culture. She shows us how they negotiated multiple identities, including that of emergent Indian nationalism, and how they perceived and shaped their Jewishness and gender in response to changing cultural and political contexts. She also traces the trajectory of a Jewish presence in one of the most hospitable cities of the diaspora.
These rich family portraits convey a sense of the singular roles women played in building and sustaining a complex diaspora in what Silliman calls ‘Jewish Asia’ over the past 150 years. Her sketches of the everyday lives of her foremothers—including the food they ate and the clothes they wore—bring to life a community and a culture, even as they disclose the unexpected and subtle complexities of the colonial encounter as experienced by Jewish women.
Now back in print and featuring a new preface by the author, Jewish Portraits, Indian Frames will be a vital resource for those interested in Jewish histories as well as women’s studies and will prove to be a fascinating narrative for a general readership as well.
‘Silliman gives an acute picture of revisionist identity formation in the United States. And the past—the Baghdadi Jewish community in Calcutta—offers a fascinating account of the relationship between urban and national identities, the heterogeneity of the Jewish diaspora, cultural difference between colony and post-colony, and, above all, women’s lives.’—Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, University Professor in the Humanities, Columbia University
‘Silliman’s most wonderful and necessary book makes a unique contribution to ongoing conversations on identity, diaspora, and the meaning of “home”. As an Argentine Sephardic Jew transplanted to the United States, I found it impossible to put down. A must read.’—Rita Arditti, author of Searching for Life: The Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo and the Disappeared Children of Argentina
‘This book offers much more than a window on a vanished community. Silliman describes Baghdadi Jews as persons “dwelling and travelling”. Their experiences across continents and cultures raise issues acutely relevant to twenty-first-century concerns with the ways religious, national, ethnic and gender identities are transacted across boundaries both fixed and malleable.’—Ann Grodzins Gold, Thomas J. Watson Professor of Religion and Professor of Anthropology at Syracuse University
- ISBN: 9780857429919
- Pages: 264
- Size (inches): 6 x 9
- Format: Paperback
- Publication Year: 2022 (first published 2001)
- Series: The India List
- Category: History and Culture Studies
If you are ordering from India, your order will be shipped from Seagull Books, Calcutta. Shipping is free for orders above ₹999.
If you are ordering from the US or the UK or anywhere else in the world, your order will be shipped from the University of Chicago Press' distribution centre, Chicago.
Please note: For customers paying in currencies other than Indian rupee or US dollar, prices will be calculated according to the currency conversion rate at the time of purchase and may vary from the printed price.
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Seagull Books (estd 1982) has been crafting books with an eye to both exceptional content and radical design. What began highly risky business of publishing books-books on alternative cinema, philosophy, culture-continues to be a passionately felt need of the hour: manuscripts that need to see the light of day, instinctive and theatre, visual arts, to reach a readership, to stimulate minds, to change outlooks. Read More
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