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Recovered Roots: Collective Memory and the Making of Israeli National Tradition » (1)

Book cover image of Recovered Roots: Collective Memory and the Making of Israeli National Tradition by Yael Zerubavel

Authors: Yael Zerubavel
ISBN-13: 9780226981581, ISBN-10: 0226981584
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Date Published: June 1997
Edition: 1

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Author Biography: Yael Zerubavel

Book Synopsis

Because new nations need new pasts, they create new ways of commemorating and recasting select historic events. In Recovered Roots, Yael Zerubavel illuminates this dynamic process by examining the construction of Israeli national tradition.

In the years leading to the birth of Israel, Zerubavel shows, Zionist settlers in Palestine consciously sought to rewrite Jewish history by reshaping Jewish memory. Zerubavel focuses on the nationalist reinterpretation of the defense of Masada against the Romans in 73 C.E. and the Bar Kokhba revolt of 133-135; and on the transformation of the 1920 defense of a new Jewish settlement in Tel Hai into a national myth. Zerubavel demonstrates how, in each case, Israeli memory transforms events that ended in death and defeat into heroic myths and symbols of national revival.

Drawing on a broad range of official and popular sources and original interviews, Zerubavel shows that the construction of a new national tradition is not necessarily the product of government policy but a creative collaboration between politicans, writers, and educators. Her discussion of the politics of commemoration demonstrates how rival groups can turn the past into an arena of conflict as they posit competing interpretations of history and opposing moral claims on the use of the past. Zerubavel analyzes the emergence of counter-memories within the reality of Israel's frequent wars, the ensuing debates about the future of the occupied territories, and the embattled relations with Palestinians.

A fascinating examination of the interplay between history and memory, this book will appeal to historians, sociologists, anthropologists, political scientists, and folklorists, as well as to scholars of cultural studies, literature, and communication.

Jewish Book World

The author explores the Zionist drive to construct a new national Hebrew culture which grew out of the early immigrants' unique interpretation of the Jewish past. Three cases are used as the foci of the study -- the fall of Masada, the Bar Kokhba revolt and the defense of Tel Hai. The conclusion is that the study of history and memory touches a sensitive nerve of Israeli society that helps shed light onsignificant changes of its national culture.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface
Introduction
Pt. 1History, Collective Memory, and Countermemory
Ch. 1The Dynamics of Collective Remembering3
Ch. 2The Zionist Reconstruction of the Past13
The Zionist Periodization of Jewish History15
Exile: Suppressed Nationhood, Discredited Past17
Locating the Nation: Antiquity and the National Revival22
Historical Continuity/Symbolic Discontinuities31
Historical Turning Points: Liminality and Transitions33
Pt. 2The Birth of National Myths
Ch. 3The Battle of Tel Hai39
A New Commemorative Tradition41
A Myth of New Beginning43
Ch. 4The Bar Kokhba Revolt48
Dual Image and Transformed Memory49
Archeological Findings and Symbolic Roots56
Ch. 5The Fall of Masada60
The Rediscovery of Masada62
A Myth of Fighting to the Bitter End68
Masada and the Holocaust as Countermetaphors70
Pt. 3Literature, Ritual, and the Invention of Tradition
Hebrew Literature and Education79
Ch. 6The Arm, the Plow, and the Gun84
Tel Hai: From "History" to "Legend"84
The Rebirth of the Native Hebrew86
The Patriotic Legacy of Heroic Death91
Ch. 7Bar Kokhba, the Bonfire, and the Lion96
From Mourning to Celebration96
The Lag ba-Omer Bonfires101
Bar Kokhba and the Lion103
Invented Tradition: The Old and the New110
Ch. 8The Rock and the Vow114
"Never Again Shall Masada Fall!"114
A New Hebrew Pilgrimage119
Climbing Up as a Patriotic Ritual125
Between Ruins and Texts127
The State's Sponsorship of Memory129
The Tourist Consumption of a Folk Tradition133
Calendars and Sites as Commemorative Loci138
Pt. 4Politics of Commemoration
Ch. 9Tel Hai and the Meaning of Pioneering147
The Plow versus the Gun148
A Patriot's Legacy or a Victim's Curse?157
Jewish Settlements and the Politics of Withdrawal160
Jokes and the Subversion of Myth167
Humor, Wars, and Political Protest173
Ch. 10The Bar Kokhba Revolt and the Meaning of Defeat178
Patriotic Dreams and Political Reality179
Archeology, Religion, and the War of the Bones185
State Commemoration and Political Frictions189
Ch. 11Masada and the Meaning of Death192
The Tragic Commemorative Narrative192
The Historical Debate: Between Facts and Fiction197
The Traditionalist Debate: Masada versus Yavne200
The Legal Debate: Suicide or Martyrdom?203
The Activist Critique: Heroism or Escapism?207
The Political Debate: Realism or a "Complex"209
Conclusion: History, Memory, and Invented Tradition214
Memory, Myth Plot Structures, and the Holiday Cycle216
The Construction of Narrative Boundaries221
Turning Points and Multiple Meanings229
The Frailty of Invented Tradition232
From Collective Memory to Multiple Memories235
Notes239
Bibliography299
Index325

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