The Trajectories of Separation: Transatlantic Networks, Disciplinary Boundaries, and the Isolated Histories of Mizrahim
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Gerber, Noah S. (Author)
- Moreno, Aviad (Author)
Title
The Trajectories of Separation: Transatlantic Networks, Disciplinary Boundaries, and the Isolated Histories of Mizrahim
Abstract
Most sociological and ethnographical studies of Israeli Mizrahim are disconnected from those of Sephardic and MENA Jewish communities worldwide. Rooted in academic cultures that predate the country's establishment, Mizrahi history in Israel is often deemed either a success story or a shameful story of marginalization in these communities' global histories, and as a sui generis case of Jewish migration. We trace the early origins of this seemingly arbitrary disconnect to nineteenth-century European scholarship on "Sephardic" turned "Oriental" Jews and follow its subsequent entrenchment not only in Mandate Palestine and Israel but also in the United States. By focusing on key scholars working across transregional networks, we show how a Sephardic bias evolved into disciplinary divisions that have constrained the development of MENA Jewish studies. Finally, we call for renewed attention to the historical and contemporary patterns of separation, diffusion, and diasporic mobility that have long characterized MENA Jewish communities.
Publication
AJS Review: The Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
Place
Pennsylvania
Date
2025
Volume
49
Issue
2
Pages
279-308
Citation Key
gerberTrajectoriesSeparationTransatlantic2025
Accessed
11/26/25, 7:12 AM
ISSN
1475-4541
Short Title
The Trajectories of Separation
Language
eng
Citation
Gerber, N. S., & Moreno, A. (2025). The Trajectories of Separation: Transatlantic Networks, Disciplinary Boundaries, and the Isolated Histories of Mizrahim. AJS Review: The Journal of the Association for Jewish Studies, 49(2), 279–308. https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/56/article/974638
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