Reviewing the Situation: Jewish and Black Identities—Inventing Strangers

Dominant national myths create versions of reality that we need to deconstruct if we are to take students beyond stereotype. Using the USA as an example, histories that do not align with critical national narratives become silenced or muted.  Preoccupation with Black and White dichotomies is just su...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers (Boston, Mass.) Vol. 32; no. 2; pp. 72 - 93
Main Author Woolf, Michael
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Journal 30.04.2020
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN1085-4568
2380-8144
DOI10.36366/frontiers.v32i2.468

Cover

More Information
Summary:Dominant national myths create versions of reality that we need to deconstruct if we are to take students beyond stereotype. Using the USA as an example, histories that do not align with critical national narratives become silenced or muted.  Preoccupation with Black and White dichotomies is just such a narrative that has hidden the significance of class; the idea of the USA as a haven for the stranger similarly blurs a long history of anti-Semitism. The essay demonstrates that collective identities are constructs not objective realities. They devolve from myths, acts of imagination, seductive narratives. A transition from myth to history, from archetypal dream to reality, reveals complexities that subvert simplistic stereotypes. Conventional assumptions about ethnicity and race need to be subject to deconstruction; if exported abroad they are likely to bring confusion rather than clarity.  In these circumstances, destabilizing student perceptions is an intellectual imperative.
ISSN:1085-4568
2380-8144
DOI:10.36366/frontiers.v32i2.468