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fot. Magdalena Marcula

Wykład prof. Larissy Remennick w Katedrze Judaistyki

Katedra Judaistyki Wydziału Neofilologii serdecznie zaprasza na wykład gościnny w ramach programu IDUB.

7 października 2025 r. (wtorek) o godz. 15:45 w Auli im. J. Woronczaka (ul. Św. Jadwigi 3/4) odbędzie się wykład pt.: The 'Tribes’ of Modern Israel: Ethnicity, Religion and Politics, który wygłosi prof. Larissa Remennick z Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Bar-Ilan University (Izrael).

Biogram

Larissa Remennick is Professor of Sociology and former Chair of the Department of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Bar-Ilan University in Israel. She immigrated from Moscow to Tel Aviv in 1991 as an early-career social scientist, and ever since has studied diverse aspects of integration among former Soviet immigrants (oIim) and their uneasy encounter with „veteran” Israeli society. Her recent research focus has been on the so-called Generations 1.5 and 2.0 of Russian-speaking Israelis, their social mobility, and identity dilemmas in Israel. Prof. Remennick has authored three books in Russian, three in English (among them Russian Jews on Three Continents: Identity, Integration, and Conflict), and some 150 articles and book chapters. She has been included in the Stanford Citation Index among the 2% of the most internationally cited social scientists.

O wykładzie

The extreme diversity of modern Israel is both its strength and liability. President Reuben Rivlin warned a few years ago that Israeli social space is increasingly divided into separate ‘tribes’, each with its own values and lifestyles, and the walls between these tribes become higher, threatening national solidarity. I will describe the origins and expressions of deep divisions between Jews and Arabs, and within the Jewish majority – between religious and secular Israelis, those living within the Green Line and West Bank settlers, Ashkenazim and Mizrahim, Jewish immigrants of Russian and Ethiopian origin. In the climate of soaring hostility towards Israel due to a protracted Gaza war, I’ll try to foreground a dynamic social history of Israel and current relations between different segments of this super-diverse society.

Data publikacji: 10.09.2025
Dodane przez: M.K.

Projekt „Zintegrowany Program Rozwoju Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego 2018-2022” współfinansowany ze środków Unii Europejskiej z Europejskiego Funduszu Społecznego