by Fran Markowitz (Editor), Fran Markowitz (Editor), John Jackson (Author), Jasmin Habib (Author), Virginia R. Dominguez (Author), Emily McKee (Author), Gabriella Djerrahian (Author), Hilla Nehushtan (Author), Jackie Feldman (Author), Joyce Dalsheim (Author), Keren Mazuz (Author), Tamir Erez (Author), Uri Dorchin (Author)
Israel is a place of paradoxes, a small country with a diverse population and complicated social terrain. Studying its culture and social life means confronting a multitude of ethical dilemmas and methodological challenges. The first-person accounts by anthropologists engage contradictions of religion, politics, identity, kinship, racialization, and globalization to reveal fascinating and often vexing dimensions of the Israeli experience. Caught up in pressing existential questions of war and peace, social justice, and national boundaries, the contributors explore the contours of Israeli society as insiders and outsiders, natives and strangers, as well as critics and friends.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 240
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Published: 11 Jun 2013
ISBN 10: 0253008611
ISBN 13: 9780253008619
Book Overview: Explores the contours of Israeli society as insiders and outsiders, natives and strangers, as well as critics and friends
Ethnographic Encounters offers outstanding ethnography, persuasively close to its subject but at the same time posing wider themes and questions vital to Israel and to the practice of anthropology in an intensely edgy contemporary society.
* Journal of Anthropological Research *Fran Markowitz is Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. She is author of Sarajevo: A Bosnian Kaleidoscope and Coming of Age in Post-Soviet Russia and editor (with Michael Ashkenazi) of Sex, Sexuality and the Anthropologist and (with Anders H. Stefansson) of Homecomings: Unsettling Paths of Return.