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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780691138879 |
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Publisher: | Princeton University Press |
Publication date: | 10/06/2013 |
Pages: | 376 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.20(d) |
About the Author
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations viiAcknowledgments ix
Introduction 1Chapter One - The Jewish Soldier between Memory and Reality 17
- War in Premodern Judaism 19
- Premodern Jews in War 22
- Jews in the Tsar's Army: Conscription as National Tragedy? 27
Chapter Two - Fighting for Rights: Conscription and Jewish Emancipation 35
- New Thinking about Jews as Soldiers in the Eighteenth Century 38
- Absolute Conscription: Jews and the Draft in the Habsburg Empire 41
- Willing Bodies: Jewish Soldiers in Western Europe 47
- The Jew as Rebel 56
- Integration and Accommodation of Jewish Soldiers 61
- Celebrating the Jewish Fighter 68
- Jewish Fighters at the Fin de Siècle: Proletarian Rebels and Shock Troops of Empire 74
Chapter Three - The Military as a Jewish Occupation 83
- Jewish Military Officers as Social Barometers 84
- The Armed Juif d'État 94
- Lives Reconstructed: French-Jewish Officers at Home and Abroad 103
Chapter Four - When May We Kill Our Brethren? Jews at War 121
- Civil Wars within Civil Wars 122
- Jews and War Finance: Between Patriotism and Internationalism 145
- World War I: The End or Pinnacle of Jewish Transnationalism? 152
- Jewish Veterans as a Transnational Community 160
Chapter Five - The Jewish Soldier of World War I: From Participant to Victim 166Chapter Six - The World Wars as Jewish Wars 195
- The Jewish Legion and Palestine: The First Global Jewish War? 196
- Mobilized Jewish Internationalism: The Spanish Civil War 200
- The Second World War: Fighting Amalek 207
Chapter Seven - 1948 as a Jewish World War 225
- The Global Battle for a Jewish State 226
- 1948: The View from America 248
Epilogue 254Notes 263Bibliography 317Index 337
What People are Saying About This
"This book shatters the conventional image of diaspora Jews as a people who shun warfare. With exemplary scholarship and a gimlet eye for telling historical evidence, Derek Penslar analyzes Jewish participation in armies from the seventeenth century to the present. Wide-ranging in its scope, original in its argument, and elegant in its presentation, this is the work of a master historian at the peak of his powers."—Bernard Wasserstein, author of On the Eve: The Jews of Europe Before the Second World War"Derek Penslar's Jews and the Military reminds us of the importance of great historians. It has been a common belief, especially in Israel, that diaspora Jews before the advent of political Zionism lacked the will to fight. Penslar shows us, in his astute and meticulous way, that Jews not only fought, but also had the courage to do so while struggling with hybrid, sometimes clashing identities. An illuminating book."—Bernard Avishai, author of Promiscuous: "Portnoy's Complaint" and Our Doomed Pursuit of Happiness"By changing Jewish historical accounts of engagement in war from the passive to the active voice, Derek Penslar transforms our understanding of continuities between the history of the diaspora and the military culture of the Yishuv and the state of Israel. A strikingly original study, Penslar's book rearranges the scholarship of major facets of modern Jewish history."—Jay Winter, Yale University"This book recovers the history of the Jewish soldier in the diaspora—from the seventeenth century to the middle of the twentieth century—and connects it to the early military history of the state of Israel. Combining a consummate command of the extant scholarship with sophisticated analysis, and encompassing a broad array of questions and sources, this is social and cultural history at its best. There is absolutely nothing else like it in any language."—David Sorkin, City University of New York, Graduate Center"This book offers a new comparative history of state policy toward Jewish army service and rethinks modern Jewish political culture through the lens of military service. Demolishing the myth of diaspora Jewish pacifism, Penslar shows that attitudes toward soldiering and citizenship in Israeli political culture were anticipated in diaspora Jewish assimilationist and integrationist visions. Jewish historians, historians of modern Europe, and many others will want to read this book."—Kenneth B. Moss, Johns Hopkins University