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2021 | 30 | 1 | 173 – 188

Article title

“IF I FORGET THEE, O BAGHDAD”: THE DEMISE OF ARAB-JEWISH IDENTITY AND CULTURE

Authors

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article examines the emergence of the modern Arabic literary writing of the Jews of Iraq. After only a few decades, the start of its demise, in both Iraq and outside it, and then the switch to writing in Hebrew in Israel. The high point of such writing in Arabic was during the 1920s when Iraqi-Jews started to produce literary works that “were Arabic in essence and expression.” It was a secular literature, inspired by a cultural vision whose most eloquent dictum was “religion is for God, the fatherland is for everyone.” However, during recent decades the Arabic literature that 20th-century Iraqi-Jews have produced has been totally relegated to the margins of Arabic culture. This development was due not only to political and national circumstances but also to the aesthetic and cultural norms of both Arabic-Muslim and Hebrew-Jewish cultural systems. The vision embedded in the aforementioned dictum was the product of a very limited period, a very confined space, and a very singular history. It lived to the age of a sturdy human being, by this rare combination of time, space and history, before disappearing and being forgotten, at least for the foreseeable future.

Year

Volume

30

Issue

1

Pages

173 – 188

Physical description

Contributors

author
  • The University of Haifa, 199 Aba Khoushy Ave. Mount Carmel, Haifa, 3498838, Israel

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.cejsh-dded83a1-0f20-41cc-b3a6-43d58ae1942c
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