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Innovation From Above, Below, and Behind: The Linguistics of the Hebrew Revival
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In: Senior Projects Spring 2021 (2021)
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Queerness in Translation: Women’s Homoerotics and Gender Play in pre- and post-Revolutionary Iran
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“Sons of Shem:” Visions for Jewish-Arab Integration and Semitism in the Second Aliyah (1904-1914) ...
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Mark, Maytal. - : Digital Repository at the University of Maryland, 2021
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Cross-Genre, Cross-Lingual, and Low-Resource Emotion Classification
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The Crucial Importance of Basket Weaving Technology for the World's First Civilizations ...
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The Crucial Importance of Basket Weaving Technology for the World's First Civilizations ...
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The Language of Politics, The Politics of Language: The Political Literature in the Late Ottoman Empire and the Early Turkish Republic ...
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Prophetic Eloquence as Linguistic Precedent: The Philology of Ḥadīth from Sībawayhi to al-Farrāʾ ...
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The Shared Intellectual History of Vocalisation in Syriac, Arabic, and Hebrew ...
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Posegay, Nick. - : Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository, 2021
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Palestinian Evangelical Christian Music in Bethlehem, Israel/Palestine
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In: Senior Honors Theses (2021)
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Beyond the Realm of Religion: The Idea of the Secular in Premodern Islam
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الوقف على تاء تأنيث الاسم بين اللغة والرواية وخط المصاحف العثمانية ...
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الوقف على تاء تأنيث الاسم بين اللغة والرواية وخط المصاحف العثمانية ...
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الوقف على تاء تأنيث الاسم بين اللغة والرواية وخط المصاحف العثمانية ...
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The Shared Intellectual History of Vocalisation in Syriac, Arabic, and Hebrew
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Posegay, Nick. - : University of Cambridge, 2021. : Corpus Christi, 2021
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“Sons of Shem:” Visions for Jewish-Arab Integration and Semitism in the Second Aliyah (1904-1914)
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Faithful/Traitor: Violence, Nationalism, and Performances of Druze Belonging
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Abstract:
In 2018, Israel passed the Basic Law, or more commonly known as the nation-state bill, explicitly stating that Israel is exclusively the state of Jewish people and that national self-determination in Israel is unique to Jews. While some revered the bill for being crucial in a time of increased anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism, Israeli Druze were outraged and offended by the bill’s language citing their patriotism and service in the Israeli Defense Forces as a marker of being real Israelis. This dissertation investigates contemporary ways ethnic minorities seek recognition and perform belonging within ethnonational states to answer the questions: Why do minority communities participate in perpetuating violence for a state that denies their equality? What do the experiences of minorities reveal about violence’s functional reality for disenfranchised groups? Drawing on nine months of field research conducted between 2015 and 2018 in Israel and the Occupied Golan Height and in three languages (Hebrew, Arabic, and English), this study integrates ethnographic, media, and sensorial data from cultural performances of Israel’s Druze minority, a bilingual ethno-religious group, within the Green Line and in the Occupied Golan Heights to advance two main arguments. First, as ethno-nationalism progresses in the world, leaving some citizens inside and outside who and what constitutes “the nation”, language, culture, and our very senses are laced with connotational meanings set by hegemonic identities of the state. Furthermore, these meanings set discursive boundaries within which marginalized communities may negotiate and perform their national belonging. Second, although marginalized minority communities are legally and socio-culturally excluded from the nation, they vie for recognition and belonging using nationally sanctioned violence as a primary discursive anchor. I demonstrate that, in an attempt for national inclusion, Druze perform violence in highly sensorial and localized ways that incorporate portions of their Arab identity. This dissertation discusses performativity of violence and the contradictory results it produces for minorities who use state violence to physically and culturally distance themselves from other minorities.
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Keyword:
Cultural anthropology|Middle Eastern Studies|Judaic studies
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URL: http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=28022098
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A Comprehensive Analysis of Coda Clusters in Hijazi Arabic: An Optimality-Theoretic Perspective
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Investigating Intercultural Sensitivity in Saudi Arabian Women in the United States: Making Sense of Lived Experiences
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