Studies in cultural history (e.g. by George L. Mosse and Sander L. Gilman) have shown that German-Jewish masculine identities in 19th and 20th century Germany were to be located somewhere in between centrality (Jewish fraternities, youth movement, army experience, i.e. aspects of hegemonic masculinity) and particularity (outsider position, stigma of effeminacy). The German Jews who migrated to Palestine in the 1930s (Yekkes) had been socialized under the influence of gender norms prevalent in Germany. How were their representations of gender and masculinity affected by the migration process and the subsequent acculturation in Palestine/Israel? This paper is based on the ‹Oral History› interviews with Yekkes that were conducted in the 1990s by a German-Israeli research team.
Zitieren Sie diesen Beitrag bitte wie folgt:
Farges, Patrick: Männlichkeitskonstruktionen von Jeckes in Israel. <http://www.germanistik.ch/publikation.php? id=Maennlichkeitskonstruktionen_von_Jeckes_in
_Israel> (Publiziert März 2013)
oder
Farges, Patrick: Männlichkeitskonstruktionen von Jeckes in Israel. In: Michael Stolz, Laurent Cassagnau, Daniel Meyer und Nathalie Schnitzer (Hg.): Germanistik in der Schweiz (GiS) Zeitschrift der Schweizerischen Akademischen Gesellschaft für Germanistik. Heft 10/2013. Bern: germanistik.ch 2013, S.21-29